Hard Corps: Uprising
0 sources
Hard Corps: Uprising
Summary
Hard Corps: Uprising is a video game[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Hard Corps: Uprising's instance of is recorded as Uprising — instance of (P31): video game[3].
- Hard Corps: Uprising was published by Uprising — publisher (P123): Konami[4].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's genre is Uprising — genre (P136): run and gun[5].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's developer is recorded as Uprising — developer (P178): Arc System Works[6].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's part of the series is recorded as Uprising — part of the series (P179): Contra[7].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's platform is recorded as Uprising — platform (P400): PlayStation 3[8].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's platform is recorded as Uprising — platform (P400): Q48263[9].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's game mode is recorded as Uprising — game mode (P404): single-player video game[10].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's game mode is recorded as Uprising — game mode (P404): co-op mode[11].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's input device is recorded as Uprising — input device (P479): gamepad[12].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's country of origin is recorded as Uprising — country of origin (P495): Japan[13].
- Hard Corps: Uprising was published on February 16, 2011[14].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's ESRB rating is recorded as Uprising — ESRB rating (P852): Teen[15].
- Hard Corps: Uprising's CERO rating is recorded as Uprising — CERO rating (P853): B (Ages 12 and up)[16].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Hard Corps: Uprising was published by Uprising — publisher (P123): Konami[4].
Publication
Hard Corps: Uprising was released on February 16, 2011[14]. Its genre is Uprising — genre (P136): run and gun[5]. Its part of the series is recorded as Uprising — part of the series (P179): Contra[7].
Subject and Themes
Hard Corps: Uprising's part of the series is recorded as Uprising — part of the series (P179): Contra[7].
Why It Matters
Hard Corps: Uprising has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]