Interstate '82 is a vehicular combat video game for Windows. It was developed and published by Activision and released in 1999.
The game is less complex than its predecessor, Interstate '76, lacking the detailed armor and weapon management of the original. Its play-style is closer to console-based vehicular combat games like Twisted Metal, with a single health bar displaying both armor and chassis strength, as opposed to 76's armor/chassis strength system. The vehicle models have been updated to reflect the change in era, and overall, the game has a new wave feel, with several hitherto-unreleased Devo songs being on the soundtrack, as opposed to the first game's funk-inspired style.
The game is set in the southwest United States in an alternate version of the year 1982, during the Reagan Administration.
Interstate '82 features a story-mode like its predecessor, with one new option: the player can exit his vehicle and enter another, adding some strategy to the game's storyline. Another new addition is the ability to skin the new vehicle models.
Interstate 82 (I-82) is a 143.58-mile (231.07 km) Interstate Highway in the northwest United States, extending from I-90 in Ellensburg, Washington, to I-84 near Umatilla, Oregon.
In Washington, it serves the cities of Ellensburg, Yakima, and the Tri Cities (via I-182), and in Oregon, it serves Umatilla and Hermiston. Constructed from 1969 to 1987, it is the major route westwards to Seattle and eastwards to Boise and Salt Lake City (via I-84 and I-15). I-82's designation is a violation of the Interstate system's numbering rules, as it is located north of I-84, and is also primarily a north-south route. I-84 was originally designated I-80N, but received its current number in 1980 as part of efforts to eliminate suffixed routes.
I-82 passes over Selah Creek on the Fred G. Redmon Bridge. At its opening 45 years ago on November 2, 1971, it was the longest concrete arch bridge in North America. The bridge spans 549 feet (167 m) across the creek.
In 1999, a plan surfaced to extend the Interstate down south through Oregon. Three routes were proposed but all were rejected.
Interstate 84 (I-84) is an Interstate Highway with two non-contiguous sections. This western section runs from Portland, Oregon, to a junction with Interstate 80 near Echo, Utah. The sections running through Oregon and Idaho are also known as The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Highway. The highway originally served as a fork of I-80 to serve the Pacific Northwest, and was originally numbered Interstate 80N.
The highway serves and connects Portland, Oregon and Boise, Idaho with Ogden, Utah. Seattle, Washington is indirectly served by I-84 via a connection with Interstate 82. With the connection to I-80, I-84 connects these cities to points east.
I-80N was generally built along the corridor of U.S. Route 30 and U.S. Route 30S, which themselves largely followed the Oregon Trail; the U.S. Route 30S designation was decommissioned in the 1970s after the freeway replacement was mostly complete. The highway was signed with the I-84 designation in 1980, when a 1977 change in guidelines took effect that discouraged highway numbers with directional suffixes. The renumbering resulted in two highways being numbered I-84, with the other located in the Northeastern United States.
I'm in too deep
I can't get to sleep.
But when I do
I only dream of you.
I need to see your face, and feel your warm embrace.
It's your memory, that keeps me alive.
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...´
Will you remember me.
Never felt this way. There's nothing I could say.
You've only left me wanting so much more.
Emotions every day and all the love we shared
There's too much room for us to grow.
And I just can't let you go...
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...
And I just can't let you go...
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...
Will you remember me...
Like I remember you...