clubname | Ankaragücü |
---|---|
fullname | Makina Kimya Endüstrisi Ankaragücü |
founded | 1910 |
ground | Ankara 19 Mayıs Stadium,Ankara |
capacity | 19,209 |
chrtitle | President |
chairman | Ahmet Gökçek |
mgrtitle | Manager |
manager | Mesut Bakkal |
league | Süper Lig |
season | 2010–11 |
position | Süper Lig, 13th |
website | http://www.ankaragucu.org.tr |
pattern la1 | _navyshoulders |
pattern b1 | _yellowhoops |
pattern ra1 | _navyshoulders |
leftarm1 | FFF000 |
body1 | 000066 |
rightarm1 | FFF000 |
shorts1 | FFFF00 |
socks1 | FFFF00 |
pattern la2 | _shouldersonwhite |
pattern b2 | _bowonwhite |
pattern ra2 | _shouldersonwhite |
leftarm2 | yellow |
body2 | yellow |
rightarm2 | yellow |
shorts2 | FFFFFF |
socks2 | FFFFFF |
honours | Türkiye Kupası, twice |
current | 2010–11 Ankaragücü season }} |
MKE Ankaragücü (; full name ''Makina Kimya Endüstrisi Ankaragücü'') is a professional Turkish football club located in the city of Ankara. The club wears a yellow and navy kit and play their home matches at Ankara 19 Mayis.
The clubs greatest domestic success were two Türkiye Kupası trophies in 1972 and 1981. They also won the second division on two occasions. Amateur-wise, the club won five Ankara Football League titles. The club has a rivalry with Gençlerbirliği.
Ankaragücü also operates cycling, taekwondo and women's volleyball branches. The women's volleyball team have competed in the Turkish Women's Volleyball League since the 2009–10 season.
Another theory is that the club splintered, with some players following Şükrü Abbas and others following Agah Orhan. Şükrü Abbas founded Turan Sanatkaragücü in 1910. In 1938, both clubs merged to form AS-FA Gücü. The club name was changed for one last time in 1948, with both sides settling on Ankaragücü.
Ankaragücü were relegated to the 2.Lig in 1967–68 after finishing second to last place. The club returned to the top league next season. Ankaragücü was again relegated in 1975–1976 season, but promoted to the 1st League next season. Ankaragücü was relegated for the third time in 1977–1978 season.
In 1993 however, his life was cut short, during his military service he was martyred by terrorists. This tragic event bought Bursaspor and Ankaragücü even closer together. During the first game after his death, Bursaspor organized a tribute to him, the events which happened next cemented the brotherhood between these two teams. A large group of Ankaragücü supporters made their way onto the pitch and unveiled a large banner reading, 'Our brother Abdul will never die, he lives on in our hearts'. The two supporter groups united and hundreds of Ankaragucu ultras attended his funeral. From that day on Bursaspor supporters would chant Ankaragucu's name in the 6th minute of every home game, 6 being significant due to 6 being Ankara's city code.
Ankaragücü supporters in return chant Bursaspor's name during the 16th minute, 16 being Bursa's city code. When the two sides play, the supporters sit together, its one of the rare occasions in which ultra from opposing teams watch a game together in a mixed environment, they bring 'Bursankara' scarfs (a merger of the two clubs names) to the games and create a fantastic atmosphere full of mutual respect.
! Season | ! Round | ! Country | ! Club | ! Home | ! Away | ! Aggregate |
1R | 1-1 | 0–1 | 1-2 | |||
1R | 0-2 | 0–4 | 0-6 | |||
1R | FC SKA Rostov-on-Don | 0-2 | 0-3 | 0-5 |
! Season | ! Round | ! Country | ! Club | ! Home | ! Away | ! Aggregate |
rowspan="2" | QR | B36 Tórshavn | 1-0 | 1–0 | 2-0 | |
1R | Atlético Madrid | 1-0 | 0-3 | 1-3 | ||
1R | 1-2 | 0–3 | 1-5 |
Category:Ankaragücü Category:Association football clubs established in 1910 Category:Turkish football clubs
ar:أنقرة غوجو az:Ankaragücü (Ankara) ca:Makina Kimya Endüstrisi Ankaragücü da:Ankaragücü de:MKE Ankaragücü es:Ankaragücü fa:باشگاه فوتبال آنکاراگوچو fr:MKE Ankaragücü Spor Kulübü hr:MKE Ankaragücü id:Ankaragücü it:Makina Kimya Endüstrisi Ankaragücü lt:MKE Ankaragücü hu:MKE Ankaragücü nl:Ankaragücü ja:アンカラギュチュ no:MKE Ankaragücü uz:Ankaragyujyu pl:MKE Ankaragücü pt:Ankaragücü ro:MKE Ankaragücü ru:Анкарагюджю (футбольный клуб) sk:Ankaragücü tr:MKE Ankaragücü tk:AnkaragüjüThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Liu Kang |
---|---|
Series | ''Mortal Kombat'' |
Creator | John Tobias and Ed Boon |
Firstgame | ''Mortal Kombat'' (1992) |
Voiceactor | Brian Tochi (''MK: DotR'')Tom Choi (''MKvDC'', ''MK2011'') |
Motionactor | Ho Sung Pak (''MK'', ''MKII'')Eddie Wong (''MK3'', ''UMK3'', ''MKT'') |
Liveactor | Robin Shou (films)Carmichael Simon, Jon Valera, Michael Li, Allan Sandoval (''Live Tour'') |
Inuniverse | }} |
Liu Kang () is a video game character in the ''Mortal Kombat'' fighting game series. First appearing in the series' first title, Liu Kang is portrayed as a Shaolin monk who enters the Mortal Kombat tournament to save his world, Earthrealm, from being destroyed due to having lost nine consecutive tournaments. Since his victory in the tournament, Liu Kang acts as defender from the Earthrealms along with the Earth's warriors and his mentor, the thunder god Raiden.
Liu Kang appears in most games as a playable character, including as the lead character from ''Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks'' along with Kung Lao, and has also appeared in the live-action films from the series and the comic adaptations. His character was created to be the hero of the series, with most of his moves being less violent and easier to perform than the ones from other characters. His critical reception was mixed, with some of them criticizing his gameplay while others noted him to be entertaining.
Liu Kang was played by Ho Sung Pak in the first two games, and John Tobias stated in an interview that he originally intended for the character to be a traditional bald monk, but the actor refused to shave his head. In the first game, Liu Kang was modeled after Bruce Lee, as he had short hair and went shirtless, with a threadbare outfit of only black pants and white shoes. The word "Otomix" was supposed to be written in his pants as Otomix is a supplier of martial arts and athletic wear, but the staff decided to remove to avoid advertising it. In ''Mortal Kombat II,'' his outfit was enhanced with red stripes, and now included a red headband, black shoes, and studded wristguards. In ''Mortal Kombat 3,'' his hair was considerably longer, with the only alteration to his outfit being thin black leg strips wrapped above his ankles in order to give him a "sleeker" look for the game. He was given a red tank top in addition to his usual costume in ''Mortal Kombat 4'', but his alternate outfit was blue and featured him shirtless again. His wardrobe from the third game was carried over into ''Deception'' and ''Armageddon'', but due to his resurrection, his skin was ash gray, and he wore hooked chains around his wrists. This form is also known by fans and ''Mortal Kombat'' producer Shaun Himmerick as "Zombie Liu Kang". Nevertheless, his alternate outfit for both games featured him as a living person in order to contrast his undead form. In ''Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe'', he sported a slightly altered version of his third costume, in addition to a championship belt adorned with the ''Mortal Kombat'' dragon emblem. Although in ''Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks'', Liu Kang's design remains similar to his ''Mortal Kombat II'' one, Himmerick comments that it was the most revised one from the game along with Kung Lao's.
In ''Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance'', the sorcerers Shang Tsung and Quan Chi join forces to kill Liu Kang, who is unplayable in the game. By the time of ''Mortal Kombat: Deception'', his mentor, Raiden, reanimates Liu Kang's body and sends it on a rampage, causing his soul to attempt to control it. The undead Liu Kang appears as a secret character that can only be unlocked through the Konquest Mode. In the PlayStation Portable version of ''Deception'', ''Mortal Kombat: Unchained'', he is directly playable as the staff noted that it was very difficult to unlock him in ''Deception''. From there, Liu Kang enlists with the ninja Ermac to try and save his friends from Onaga who has been controlling them. He accomplishes this task in ''Deception'', but by ''Mortal Kombat: Armageddon'' he is still unable to fully control his body.
Along with Kung Lao, Liu Kang is the lead character in the spin-off action game ''Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks''. The game is a retelling from the storyline of ''Mortal Kombat II'' and features the two Shaolin Monks traveling to Outworld to find and defeat Shang Tsung, later ending in a fight with Shao Khan. Liu Kang also stars in the crossover ''Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe'', which features fights between characters from the ''Mortal Kombat'' and the DC Comics universe. In this game, Liu Kang appears as the protagonist from the first chapter of the ''Mortal Kombat'' story mode. (Tobias said that the fight he expected to see in the game was between Liu Kang and Batman as he noted their back-stories to be very similar.)
In the 2011 ''Mortal Kombat'' video game, Liu Kang reprises his role from the first two tournaments as Raiden who has visions from the future in which Shao Kahn remained as the last warrior believes him to be the warrior which his future self chose as the saviour. When Shao Kahn is preparing to invade Earthrealm, Raiden electrocutes Liu Kang before he could face him as he realized Shao Kahn had to win and merge the realms in order to avoid the events of the future.
Liu Kang's first finishing move is the Fatality "Shaolin Uppercut". With it Liu Kang performs a butterfly kick on his opponent, before hitting an uppercut that knocks them into the air for several seconds. In ''Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks'', there were two versions; one where the victim explodes to pieces upon impact and the original, in which the opponent is torn to pieces upon falling to the ground. In another signature Fatality he morphs into a large dragon, chomping the upper body of his opponent. Developer John Vogel noted this Fatality to be his favorite due to how much Liu Kang's appearance changes and how big he becomes. This Fatality was turned into an Animality in ''Mortal Kombat 3'' and back into a normal Fatality in ''Mortal Kombat 4''. In the Game Boy and Game Gear versions of ''Mortal Kombat II'', he torches the opponent with a fireball. He also has a Fatality in which he disappears and then a ''Mortal Kombat'' arcade game machine drops down and crushes his opponent.
He is the main protagonist in both ''Mortal Kombat'' movies, portrayed by Robin Shou. Director Paul W. S. Anderson wanted Liu Kang's character to be "really engaging" and chose Shou, noting his skills with martial arts. In the first film, he takes part in the tournament out of guilt over his brother's death at the hands of Shang Tsung, and defeats Tsung in the final battle. Shou, along with Talisa Soto, was one of only two actors to reprise their roles in the sequel, ''Mortal Kombat: Annihilation'' (Keith Cooke, who played Reptile, returned as well, but as the new Sub-Zero). In the sequel, Liu Kang joins the Earthrealm warriors to stop Shao Kahn's menace.
Liu Kang was also one of the lead characters in the 1996 animated series ''Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm'', voiced by Brian Tochi. He was not the main protagonist therein as opposed to the game storyline, instead sharing this role with several other Earthrealm heroes.
In the animated film ''Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins'', Liu Kang appears as one of the main characters.
Some video game publications criticized his gameplay and shouts while others noted him to be entertaining. IGN's Douglas Perry wrote that he preferred Liu Kang over Kung Lao as a playable character in ''Shaolin Monks'' because of his "intuitive fighting moves," adding that his shouts were "annoying" yet "strangely pleasing." GameDaily also complained on his voice, saying that "Liu Kang screams out like a chicken". Eurogamer commented that Liu Kang's kicks are ridiculous, while their intensified versions from ''Shaolin Monks'' are demented. Upon his death in ''Deadly Alliance'', IGN's Jeremy Dunham noted that Liu Kang was killed as the series needed "'starting over' mentality", as he regarded Liu Kang as the series' strongest character. IGN also said that "it just wouldn't be right having a game without him", noting that him to be as fierce as the DC characters from ''Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe''. Like all the characters from ''Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe'', Liu Kang was selected to be a playable character based on his popularity.
Category:Fictional Buddhist monks Category:Fictional characters based on real people Category:Fictional characters introduced in 1992 Category:Fictional Chinese people Category:Fictional Jeet Kune Do practitioners Category:Fictional martial artists Category:Fictional undead Category:Fictional wushu practitioners Category:Film characters Category:Male video game characters Category:Mortal Kombat characters
ar:ليو كانغ ca:Liu Kang es:Liu Kang fr:Liu Kang it:Liu Kang nl:Liu Kang pt:Liu Kang ru:Лю Кэнг ur:لیو کینگ (مارٹل کامبیٹ)This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
name | Jason Hall |
---|---|
birth date | May 20, 1971 |
birth place | Buffalo, New York |
death date | |
nationality | American |
other names | Jace |
occupation | artist, producer, writer, gamer }} |
In 2007, Hall founded HDFILMS INC., a production company that produces film, television, videogame and online content. The company is best known for its original reality show, ''The Jace Hall Show'', which debuted on Crackle.com and reached over 4 million viewers. In 2010, the show switched to IGN.com. HDFILMS has a first-look development deal with Warner Bros. Studios and has several high-profile projects in the works including ''V: The Series'', a remake of the original television series.
Year !! Title | |
2007 | ''300: March to Glory'' |
2006 | Happy Feet (video game)>Happy Feet'' |
2006 | ''Justice League Heroes'' |
2006 | Xiaolin Showdown (video game)>Xiaolin Showdown'' |
2005 | Batman Begins (video game)>Batman Begins'' |
2005 | Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005 video game)>Charlie and the Chocolate Factory'' |
Category:1971 births Category:African-American people Category:American chief executives Category:American film producers Category:American people of Italian descent Category:American video game designers Category:Living people Category:Monolith Productions Category:People from Buffalo, New York Category:Video game actors
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Name | Noob Saibot|image |
---|---|
Series | ''Mortal Kombat'' |
Firstgame | ''Mortal Kombat II'' |
Liveactor | Daniel Pesina (''MKII'')John Turk (''UMK3'', ''MKT'')J.J. Perry (second film)Kimball Uddin (''Konquest'')Jamieson Price (voice, ''MK2011'') |
Inuniverse | }} |
Noob Saibot is a video game character from the ''Mortal Kombat'' fighting game series. He debuted as a hidden character in ''Mortal Kombat II'' (), although the later game ''Mortal Kombat: Deception'' () established his true identity as that of the original Sub-Zero, who was killed by his nemesis Scorpion after the events in the first ''Mortal Kombat''. The character's name comes from the last names of the creators of the ''Mortal Kombat'' franchise, Ed Boon and John Tobias, spelled in reverse.
In ''Mortal Kombat: Deception'', Noob Saibot is free to command his own group of assassins to serve him. He makes the cyborg Smoke his servant, with both characters appearing as early bosses, under the name "Noob Smoke". Here it was revealed that Noob Saibot was the resurrected form of the original Sub-Zero, named Bi-Han () who appeared in the first ''Mortal Kombat'' tournament and was killed by his enemy Scorpion. This revelation is explored further in ''Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks'' when Noob Saibot is pursued by his younger brother during one of the cut-scenes.
''Mortal Kombat: Armageddon'' featured Noob Saibot as a playable character. In the game's story mode, he and Smoke invade the Lin Kuei ninja clan's castle, assimilating most of the defending Lin Kuei ninja, turning them into their own subordinate warriors. Noob Saibot and Smoke are eventually defeated by the warrior Taven, and Noob Saibot is left in the castle, unconscious. Sub-Zero then tries to force Noob Saibot to recall his past identity.
Noob Saibot's latest appearance is in the 2011 ''Mortal Kombat'' video game. After being killed by Scorpion, he is subsequently resurrected by Quan Chi and serves as one of his enforcers. Supporting him and Shao Kahn, Noob Saibot is trapped by the Earth warrior Nightwolf in a magical tornado that explodes alongside him.
In Noob Saibot's debut game, ''Mortal Kombat II'', he serves as a hidden opponent rather than a playable character. To fight him, the player is required to win fifty rounds in a row. His appearance was that of a silhouette of Scorpion and his special abilities in ''Mortal Kombat II'' were copied from Scorpion. Losing to Noob Saibot in the Arcade version of ''Mortal Kombat II'', Shao Kahn says, "Feel the power of -" and is abruptly cut off by Forden's "Toasty!"; however, in the SNES version of ''Mortal Kombat II'' will cause shouts of ''"You will die, mortal!"'' and ''"Toasty!"'' from Shao Kahn and Dan Forden, respectively. In ''Mortal Kombat 3'', Noob Saibot is not a ninja palette swap, but actually a silhouette of Kano, since there were no human ninja in the game; as a result, his move list contains only Kano's combos. After Noob wins a round, a programming glitch has the voice over saying, ''"Kano shows mercy!"'' In the Game Gear version, he had Kano's special moves and the Eyebeam Fatality. However, in ''Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3'' (UMK3), due to the return of the ninja characters, he was given a full black sprite in the arcade and home versions, save for the Sega Saturn. Losing to Noob Saibot in UMK3's Arcade, Nintendo DS, and Sega Saturn conversions will cause Shao Kahn to say ''"It's official, you suck!"''.
Noob Saibot is playable in ''Shaolin Monks'' in the Versus mode if both players select Sub-Zero; the last player to select him will play as a variation of Noob Saibot. He is colored black, like the real Noob Saibot, but he has Sub-Zero's frozen forearms and retains all of his younger brother's moves and fatalities.
The only game in the main series Noob has not appeared in is ''Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance''; however, is still included in the roster of ''Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition''.
Noob Saibot appeared in ''Mortal Kombat: Annihilation'', as a warrior who emerged from Ermac. Although he is not referred to by name in the film, or listed in the credits, he is specifically mentioned by name in the novelization based on the film. He was played by J.J. Perry.
UGO.com ranked Noob Saibot at number three in their "Top 15 Mortal Kombat Characters" article, stating approval for his character evolution as the series progressed. In a humor article by GameSpy, the ''Mortal Kombat: Trilogy'' version of Noob Saibot was noted as being broken, citing a combo, where Noob Saibot fires one "Disabler" does a short combo then fires another "Disabler" in which the opponent can not escape. It jokingly noted that the only way to beat this combo was to eject the game. Noob Saibot, along with Sub-Zero, Scorpion, Reptile, Smoke, Ermac, Rain and Chameleon was ranked #3 in GamePro's 2009 list of the best palette-swapped video game characters. IGN noted that fighting Noob was one of the more difficult secrets to attain in ''Mortal Kombat II''. Kotaku praised his Fatality describing it as "vicious looking" and calling it a highlight of ''Mortal Kombat''.
Category:Fictional undead Category:Fictional characters who can teleport Category:Mortal Kombat characters Category:Fictional assassins Category:Fictional Chinese people Category:Fictional hapkido practitioners Category:Fictional murderers Category:Fictional ninja Category:Fictional mercenaries Category:Fictional wushu practitioners Category:Film characters Category:Fictional characters introduced in 1993 Category:Male video game characters
ca:Noob Saibot es:Noob Saibot fr:Noob Saibot it:Noob Saibot nl:Noob Saibot pt:Noob Saibot ru:Нуб Сайбот fi:Noob SaibotThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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