EGOISM 440: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 19: Line 19:
* EGOISM 440 is one of the EXTRA STAGE songs of the ''Replicant D-ignition'' event of DanceDanceRevolution (2014). It can be played after obtaining all five orbs, by getting at least a AA rank on the EXPERT charts of the previous five Replicant D-ignition songs. By obtaining EGOISM 440's orb, the player will immediately access [[MAX.(period)]] as the ENCORE EXTRA STAGE.
* EGOISM 440 is one of the EXTRA STAGE songs of the ''Replicant D-ignition'' event of DanceDanceRevolution (2014). It can be played after obtaining all five orbs, by getting at least a AA rank on the EXPERT charts of the previous five Replicant D-ignition songs. By obtaining EGOISM 440's orb, the player will immediately access [[MAX.(period)]] as the ENCORE EXTRA STAGE.
** Note that by playing EGOISM 440, the player loses ''all'' the orbs, regardless of clearing the song or not.
** Note that by playing EGOISM 440, the player loses ''all'' the orbs, regardless of clearing the song or not.
** Since August 6th, 2015, EGOISM 440 can be unlocked via the ''EXTRA ATTACK'' unlocking system.
** Since August 6th, 2015, EGOISM 440 can be unlocked via the ''EXTRA ATTACK'' unlocking system after unlocking the five previous songs ([[chaos eater]], [[Destination]], [[HAPPY LUCKY YEAPPY|HAPPY☆LUCKY☆YEAPPY]], [[Samurai Shogun vs. Master Ninja]], and [[Sand Blow]]).
* Egoism is a philosophical theory that one's self is the motivation and goal for all of one's actions.
* Egoism is a philosophical theory that one's self is the motivation and goal for all of one's actions.
** EGOISM 440's title might be a homage to [[PARANOiA]] by [[Naoki Maeda|180]], due to referencing the main BPM of the song, and that egoism and paranoia are both thought processes that have a overly high level of self-importance.
** EGOISM 440's title might be a homage to [[PARANOiA]] by [[Naoki Maeda|180]], due to referencing the main BPM of the song, and that egoism and paranoia are both thought processes that have a overly high level of self-importance.
3,707

edits