Why no miss?
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1up
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Why no miss?
In the glossary it says no miss means when you can complete a level in a shmup without dying.
so why no miss? As far as I can see you missed all the bullets and hit almost all enemy ships?
How did this expression originate? Is it engrish?
maybe its no miss(haps) aka no mistakes?
so why no miss? As far as I can see you missed all the bullets and hit almost all enemy ships?
How did this expression originate? Is it engrish?
maybe its no miss(haps) aka no mistakes?
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Klatrymadon
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GaijinPunch
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MovingTarget
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GaijinPunch
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MovingTarget
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Stop trying to be a smartarse man. Its meant to be in english, but 'no miss' doesnt actually make any sense, at least in english terms. If you get a no miss the enemy has missed you every single time! and its not like you've been missing the enemy! If the developers are going to use english they might as well make it understandable to english speakers. Hardly anyone knows why it means no deaths, only that it does.
Know thy enemy attack pattern.
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Arvandor
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Why do feet smell and noses run? If you try picking apart the nuances of the English Language, you're only going to hurt your brain. A lot of it doesn't make sense, at least not to anyone but the originator of whatever phrase (and even then sometimes you have to wonder). Really I'd just not worry about it. Everyone who plays shooters knows what you're talking about, and if your point is getting accross, do semantics really matter?

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GaijinPunch
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I'm not being a smartass, I'm being dead serious. Just b/c a word or phrase is derived from English doesn't mean it is English. "No miss" is indeed a Japanese phrase. It just happens to use two English words.MovingTarget wrote:Stop trying to be a smartarse man. Its meant to be in english, but 'no miss' doesnt actually make any sense, at least in english terms.
Japanese only has a shitload of words that are derived from other languages but sound silly or grammatically incorrect when a native speaker of that langauge hears them. I would never tell someone they "have a large compass" in English if they happen to take big steps. I would even say it is bad English colloquially. It is not only fair game, but common in Japanese.
I will take a stab though for people that insist it make sense in English.
Miss = error, fuck-up, etc. (example: I missed... eg, I made a mistake).
Could even be derived from mistake, mismatch, etc.
RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
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MovingTarget
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The point is that nobody can actually answer the topic creater. All they or any other english speaker wants to know is why the word 'miss' is used.. Its funny how nobody actually has a definite answer, just what they suspect.
I assume its actually derived from no mistake, or at least is meant to mean that.
On a lighter note, no miss bonuses are fun!
I assume its actually derived from no mistake, or at least is meant to mean that.
On a lighter note, no miss bonuses are fun!
Know thy enemy attack pattern.
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GaijinPunch
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Ummm.... I gave two examples, one of which is correct.MovingTarget wrote:All they or any other english speaker wants to know is why the word 'miss' is used.. Its funny how nobody actually has a definite answer, just what they suspect.
Why do they say "I missed" a flop in Texas Hold 'em. B/c that's the way languages work.
Last edited by GaijinPunch on Sat Feb 10, 2007 4:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
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Triple Lei
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sikraiken
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Well, I think I might have the best answer so far. (MJR's is pretty good as well, though - looking at gameandwatch.com I was able to find one that had "miss" on the screen from 1981.)

When you put Bosconian on Auto difficulty, and you do not die on a level, you get that. The game was released in 1981. I don't know if there are other games before then that also said no miss, but I always remembered that from when I used to play the game.

When you put Bosconian on Auto difficulty, and you do not die on a level, you get that. The game was released in 1981. I don't know if there are other games before then that also said no miss, but I always remembered that from when I used to play the game.
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it depends on the game...Limbrooke wrote:Holy shit. I was always under the impression this meant "all enemies destroyed", then I played Mushihimesama and when that message appeared I knew something was wrong.GaijinPunch wrote:No miss = no death
End of story.
i've seen the nomiss in games for takin down every single enemy on the level...
also, i've seen the no miss thing in games for clearin up a level w/o loosing a life... so, both cases are right for me... even tho, i think the most common used case is for the latter one.
like gaijin punch was sayin, i think of a no miss like when you say "i missed the ball"... its like sayin "i failed to hit the ball"....
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cigsthecat
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http://www.sciencemadesimple.com/sky_blue.htmlSpecineff wrote:Can someone tell me why the sky is?
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GaijinPunch
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But my example still means "did not make a mistake".... any time means you've killed all the enemies, they're actually using the phrase improperly.like gaijin punch was sayin, i think of a no miss like when you say "i missed the ball"... its like sayin "i failed to hit the ball"....
RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
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doctorx0079
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Specineff
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You missed the reference. Not why the sky is blue (light and air and colors, I know.) Can you tell me why the sky is?cigsthecat wrote:http://www.sciencemadesimple.com/sky_blue.htmlSpecineff wrote:Can someone tell me why the sky is?
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professor ganson
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I always assumed that when you die in a shmup (or in life) you miss your target of staying alive. If you don't die, you don't miss. I.e. no miss. End of story.
Btw, that's a nice example of the existential use of 'is', specineff. I'll have to remember that the next time I have to teach the different uses of 'is'.
Btw, that's a nice example of the existential use of 'is', specineff. I'll have to remember that the next time I have to teach the different uses of 'is'.
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