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标题: 1UP到底是什么意思? [打印本页]

作者: opeth    时间: 2006-9-24 20:45     标题: 1UP到底是什么意思?

一条命为什么叫1UP?最先是哪个游戏这样用法的?
作者: NWii    时间: 2006-9-24 20:48

建议楼主去玩一玩超级玛丽
作者: hmds    时间: 2006-9-24 20:54

up是不是因为是顶上去的
作者: opeth    时间: 2006-9-24 20:55

超级玛丽是第一个用1UP的游戏?不过1UP的这个UP到底是什么意思呢?
作者: 我要玩游戏    时间: 2006-9-24 20:55

引用:
原帖由 opeth 于 2006-9-24 20:45 发表
一条命为什么叫1UP?最先是哪个游戏这样用法的?
一直觉得这个1up的用法很不正宗。
作者: 我要玩游戏    时间: 2006-9-24 20:58

引用:
原帖由 opeth 于 2006-9-24 20:55 发表
超级玛丽是第一个用1UP的游戏?不过1UP的这个UP到底是什么意思呢?
应该是指命多了一条吧。
作者: tangxin983    时间: 2006-9-24 21:04

mario吧,我猜
作者: dhddhddhd    时间: 2006-9-24 22:07

7UP是七喜饮料,1UP就是1/7个七喜。
作者: zo    时间: 2006-9-24 22:33

这个是怎么读的?

是 碗 啊 普  还是       碗 you 皮 ?
作者: shigeru    时间: 2006-9-24 22:36

1 uncharged person
作者: gundamseed    时间: 2006-9-25 00:11

1UP可以参考玛丽欧骑碧奇的GIF,记得TG以前有人拿来做过头像的,后来貌似头像被咔嚓掉了...
作者: 兔猪    时间: 2006-9-25 00:13

比MARIO更早的街机游戏都有1UP.
作者: 倚天奸剑    时间: 2006-9-25 08:24

去看看小蜜蜂里显示分数的地方写的是什么
作者: xsegaxhiss    时间: 2006-9-25 09:50

一直读 一阿普~
作者: 少先队员    时间: 2006-9-25 09:59

1条命...习惯这么读..
作者: 半熟英雄    时间: 2006-9-25 10:45

命加一吧。
作者: Jeffrey    时间: 2006-9-25 10:57

万阿扑
作者: 雷霆践踏    时间: 2006-9-25 11:00

很多2P都是2UP.
那3P又是什么?
作者: PENNYSHAW    时间: 2006-9-25 11:01

引用:
原帖由 gundamseed 于 2006-9-25 00:11 发表
1UP可以参考玛丽欧骑碧奇的GIF,记得TG以前有人拿来做过头像的,后来貌似头像被咔嚓掉了...

作者: 少先队员    时间: 2006-9-25 13:01

引用:
原帖由 雷霆践踏 于 2006-9-25 11:00 发表
很多2P都是2UP.
那3P又是什么?
这个是指操作者的1P 2P 3P 4P吧...
作者: 风之扉    时间: 2006-9-25 21:25

我们叫加1架

应该是
1 life up吧
作者: golden    时间: 2006-9-25 21:26

请参考fc上的N多游戏,如mario.
作者: 神尘    时间: 2006-10-2 22:29

1 uncharged person??
这个很是象模象样
作者: 比卡丘    时间: 2006-10-3 01:41

1优皮,叫习惯了
作者: ShinKaze    时间: 2006-10-3 08:37

1UP =1 Ugly Person
作者: hugang    时间: 2006-10-3 08:44

"奖命",我们这里都这么叫.
作者: 老江湖    时间: 2006-10-3 11:27

有趣,看看!
作者: 白桦林    时间: 2006-10-3 11:29

我曾经用过那个作头像,北某些人干掉了,我很郁闷,从来我都没有过头像的感觉,唯一有感觉的就是那张图片了!
作者: fhqwb    时间: 2006-10-3 12:13

我们说的很local化:一条命
作者: 特攻一番鬼    时间: 2006-10-3 12:21

MARIO不会没玩过吧?
还是把记忆留在了上个世纪?
作者: 唐晓东    时间: 2006-10-3 13:38

1up就是 一喜
所以7UP就是 七喜啊!

七喜是什么?没有听说过???????????
作者: xfiori    时间: 2006-10-5 10:25

ms七喜和up的关系最早见于电软
作者: fangel    时间: 2006-10-5 10:44

还是GIF最嗲
作者: 左传1023    时间: 2006-10-7 12:22

显然叫“医油屁”啊!
作者: crazyundead    时间: 2006-10-7 12:45

还真从没想过这问题
作者: ywlnn    时间: 2006-10-7 12:47

有的UP最好了
作者: stryker    时间: 2006-10-7 20:44

Player one
A screenshot from the arcade game Pac-Man showing the 1UP player score indicator.
Enlarge
A screenshot from the arcade game Pac-Man showing the 1UP player score indicator.

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'.
[edit]

Extra life

In current gaming console terminology, however, 1-up refers to the acquisition of an extra life during 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').
Enlarge
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 during the 1980s due 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) 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.
作者: rezen    时间: 2006-10-7 20:52

问得好,内涵贴
作者: van601030    时间: 2006-10-7 21:03

one up
作者: 火眼    时间: 2006-10-8 01:20

我一直叫“一有屁”………………
作者: Izualizm    时间: 2006-10-8 06:17

碗 那 扑




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