游戏里up的意思
㈠ 超级马丽游戏奖一命时的“1UP”的UP是什么意思
在wikipedia查的,原文见下。简单说来,1UP最早是指多人游戏中为选手记分的区域,表示1号选手正在进行游戏('Player One is up at the machine' )。直到格斗类游戏的出现,1UP被缩写成为1P(拳皇),表示选手的选择。1UP表示“加命”是从supermario流行过来的,clear?
The original meaning of "1UP" in multiplayer-capable 1980s arcade games was to mark the player's score area. '1UP' would indicate 'Player One's score', '2UP' would indicate 'Player Two's score'. It was common to show both scores on screen at once, with the high-score area in the middle of the score row.
The precise derivation of the phrase is a little unclear. The literal meaning would seem to be 'Player One is up at the machine' in multiplayer games both 1UP and 2UP were visible at the same time but normally the current player's text would blink on and off. If it were simply an abbreviation for 'Player One' one would expect to see '1P' rather than '1UP'. In any case, for a long period in the 1980s, even in a single player game it was very common to see the score field labelled as '1UP' rather than the more obvious 'Score'.
Extra life
In current gaming console terminology, however, 1-up refers to the acquisition of an extra life ring the course of a game.
The inclusion of extra or bonus 'lives', like scoring bonuses, also derives from pinball. In pinball, the player has multiple balls (often three), and plays until a ball is lost in the gutter, at which point the next ball is loaded and the game continues. When all balls are lost, the game is over. Early arcade games took this same play concept, replacing the ball with a 'life'. Extra lives, like extra balls in pinball, could often be earned by scoring a certain number of points, or fulfilling some other complicated in-game condition.
The inclusion of extra lives was very common in videogames from the 1980s on, even in otherwise 'realistic' combat-themed games. The term '1-UP' for 'extra life', however, was not a commonly used term until recently, and then mostly among the console gaming community rather than the PC gaming community.
The 1-Up Mushroom of the Mario series is the most-recognized symbol of 1-Up (in the sense of 'extra life').
One-ups (in the second sense) are very frequent in platform games and common in other action-heavy games. Very often, "extra life" is literally true. If the player character is killed extra lives allow the player to return, unscathed, for another try. The 1-Up mushroom is frequently used in pop culture as a mascot for people born ring the 1980s e to the generation's widespread use of the Nintendo Entertainment System.
The "1-up" first appeared in the video game Super Mario Bros. 1-ups are usually collected as items or earned through specific accomplishments. One is usually the ultimate reward, and difficult to obtain. Many games give one-ups as a reward if enough (usually 100) of a certain object can be collected, such as coins (Super Mario Bros.), rings (e.g. Sonic) or diamonds. Also, 1-ups may be given as rewards for high scores. On some occasions the 1-up is surpassed by an even rarer extra continue, which awards a whole new set of lives instead of just one - very much like adding a credit in an arcade game. One-ups often take the form of icons of the main character's head, or other such representations such as dolls, coins, hearts, ankh symbols or mushrooms. A simpler icon of just the letters "1up" is also common.
Some games feature items that award more than one life at a time. They are usually referred to as 2-ups, 3-ups, 5-ups, etc., and are often represented by different colored 1-up icons. Confusingly, in some multiplayer games, if Player One receives an extra life, it's displayed as a '1-UP', and if Player Two receives an extra life, it's displayed as a '2-UP', to differentiate between whoever snagged the powerup first. Some games take this further by giving Players One and Two powerups specific to each player, and the other player cannot pick it up.
In some games, a 1-up also awards full health.
If the player loses all extra lives and continues, he suffers a game over.
The use of the term may come from Japanese wasei-eigo. "~ UP" (Japanese: ~アップ(碗 那 扑)) means "to raise the ability of; to increase." Other examples include "Power up" (used in Altered Beast), and "Ability UP!," used on the cover of some English study books in Japan. This Japanese shortening of English has provided us with another popular gaming phrase, level up; though Dungeons and Dragons aficionados may disagree about the origins of this oft-invoked phrase.
㈡ 游戏行业中提到的UP值是什么意思
UP值如下:
UP值,就是召唤师们所拥有的英雄数乘以皮肤数之和。简单来说这就是一个土豪的象征,土豪系数。多出于英雄联盟游戏,游戏中up值=英雄数量×皮肤数量。
游戏简介:
《英雄联盟》(League of Legends,简称LOL)是由美国拳头游戏(Riot Games)开发、中国内地由腾讯游戏代理运营的英雄对战MOBA竞技网游。游戏里拥有数百个个性英雄,并拥有排位系统、符文系统等特色养成系统。
《英雄联盟》致力于推动全球电子竞技的发展,除了联动各赛区发展职业联赛、打造电竞体系之外,每年还会举办“英雄联盟季中冠军赛”“英雄联盟全球总决赛”“英雄联盟全明星赛”三大世界级赛事,形成了自己独有的电子竞技文化。
㈢ 游戏中的UP什么意思
看情况而定
一般是上得意思
或者是升级的意思
㈣ up什么意思网络用语 什么是up主
1、UP主一般指在视频网站上传视频的人,是一个在日本传入的网络词汇,UP即upload的缩写, “upload有“ 上传,上载 的意思。所以UP主就有上传者的意思。国内网站A站(acfun)和B站(bilibili) . 上的视频主经常被观看者称为UP主,亦称为阿婆主。不过UP主不一定非是上传者(原创作者) , 通常转载者也被称为UP主。
2、在B站上,有许多知名的UP主,这些UP主-般都是在某- 个领域享有很高的知名度或者有独到的见解被网友所关注,比如说之前很火的papi酱,不仅是一个po主, 还是一个UP主,在微博和B站上都有很多的粉丝。还有在游戏领域非常知名的敖厂长,主要是以游戏相关介绍解说为主,在B站上也是有相当多的粉丝。
㈤ 暗黑2up是什么意思
暗黑2up是指游戏中的武器升级。
本代游戏中,武器、盾牌、头盔、铠甲会出现一种带有凹槽的情况。除了部分魔法、亮金装备、套装或暗金装备自带的凹槽,白色装备一旦带有凹槽就会变成灰色。
玩家除了可以通过第五幕的任务给指定装备增加凹槽之外,还可以用赫拉迪克方块的合成公式给装备打孔。
凹槽的作用是镶嵌物品,游戏中的宝石、珠宝和符文三类物品可以镶嵌到物品的凹槽里,它们同时也是物品合成等赫拉迪克方块公式中的重要媒介。
宝石具有天生的魔法效果。在凹槽中放入宝石后就获得了魔法效果奖励。高级别的宝石有非常强力的效果。
从颜色和效果上可以分为七种——红色、黄色、绿色、蓝色、紫色、白色以及骷髅。一但放入凹槽,宝石就无法取出。宝石神殿可以将一颗宝石提升一个等级(角色物品栏中随机选取)。
宝石还可以通过赫拉迪克方块升级,每三个宝石可以合成一个更高级的宝石。
㈥ 游戏里经常看别人说 UP 什么意思
一般都是叫你往上走啊,朝上开枪,朝上跳,或者注意上面会掉东西吧 【我想应该是这样】