![]() Reference to the Western action-adventure game Red Dead Redemption, and regarding Redigit's decision to make the 1.2 update. Reference to obsessive–compulsive disorder, a mental disorder. Terraria: Obsessive-Compulsive Discovery Simulator Reference to the hostile enemies a player may encounter on the surface. Reference to the 1991 American science fiction action movie Terminator 2: Judgement Day. Wordplay on the proverb " all's well that ends well". Reference to Dig Dug, an arcade video game published in 1982 for the Nintendo Entertainment System which involves digging blocks. Possible reference to the role-playing video game EarthBound or, more likely, a reference to the action-adventure video game Starbound, which is similar to Terraria. Possibly referencing the addition of waterfalls to the game in patch 1.2. Reference to the military proverb "no man left behind". Reference to the Suspicious Looking Eye, the summoning item for the Eye of Cthulhu boss. Reference to the "Cow Level" in the action role-playing hack and slash dungeon crawler video game series Diablo, and to another of its kind in the military science fiction media franchise StarCraft, in which the cheat code to access these levels is "There is no cow level". Rock, which was published in 1990/1991 for the Nintendo Entertainment System and which bears similarities to Terraria. Reference to the platform video game Digger T. Reference to the warning on toys with small parts. ![]() Terraria: Small Blocks, Not for Children Under the Age of 5 Reference to the proverb " the grass is always greener on the other side". Terraria: The Grass is Greener on This Side Reference to the American science fiction media franchise Jurassic Park. Reference to the 1984 American action-adventure movie Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Possible reference to the 2001 American medieval adventure-comedy movie A Knight's Tale. Tolkien's epic high fantasy novel The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, or possibly the 1983 American epic space-opera film Return of the Jedi, the third installment in the original Star Wars Trilogy. This could also be a reference to a pre-alpha "Let's Play" of Terraria where Blue states "This is, like, the only game where sand is overpowered." Reference to the ability of Sand Blocks to fall and deal damage. Possibly a reference to the fact that some new players might build their first shelter with Dirt Blocks. Reference to a line from the 1994 American comedy-drama movie Forrest Gump, which was originally "Run, Forrest! Run!". It appears in the top-middle of the game window on Windows 8 and 8.1, macOS, and Ubuntu. The current title message appears in the top-left corner of the game window on Windows 7 and Windows 10. When the game is set to full-screen, or "Borderless Window" mode is enabled ( Settings → Video → Resolution), no title will be displayed. A title message is chosen at random from the list below each time the game is started, and remains unchanged until either the game is exited completely and restarted, or a language button in the language selection menu is clicked, at which point a new message is randomly chosen.Ī title message can only display if Terraria's current settings allow a title bar to be present on Terraria's game window. These messages often reference popular culture or other video games. “It was more the stars of the movie - Adolfo ‘Shabba-Doo’ Quinones and Michael ‘Boogaloo Shrimp’ Chambers, who came up with it,” he says.A title message is a mock slogan displayed as Terraria's window title at the top of the game window. ![]() He takes no credit for the title, which was already decided upon when he boarded the project. “Though it’s not nearly as popular as American Ninja.” (A Twitter hashtag game to name book sequels, for example, resulted in responses like “ Lord of the Flies 2: Electric Boogaloo.”)įirstenberg loved the trend, which seemed to revive interest in the campy breakdancing flick: “It’s screened at festivals the past few years,” he says. “In the last 10 years or so, it became equal with the word ‘sequel,'” Firstenberg explains. Until only recently, “Electric Boogaloo” was a lighthearted meme. The boogaloo boys’ one goal: to hasten a second Civil War. On message boards, it was referred to as “Civil War 2: Electric Boogaloo.” That’s where the name originated. Theranos' Elizabeth Holmes Loses Her Bid to Stay Out of PrisonĬarrillo later scrawled the word “Boog” in his own blood on the hood of a stolen vehicle during a June 6 gun battle with police in Santa Cruz County that also claimed a sheriff’s deputy’s life.Īccording to The New York Times, the movement originated on platforms like Reddit, 4chan and Facebook, its name “derived as an inside joke from the 1984 cult classic film Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo.” Its followers often wear brightly colored Aloha shirts, because boogaloo also sounds like “big luau.”
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