24/05/21
Mad Rat Dead is a duplicitous beast. Take a quick glance at any of the below screenshots and you’d be forgiven for thinking it’s just another bog standard 2D platformer. But that’s where you would be wrong, because Mad Rat Dead is a rhythm action 2D platformer. How the blue hells does that even work? Well, you’ll have to keep on reading to find out.
Mad Rat Dead follows all the normal rules of a 2D platformer. Your avatar, a recently deceased lab rat, must bound from left to right through increasingly challenging platform-filled levels. The crucial difference is that accompanying Mad Rat’s leaps, flips and dives is a funky musical tune. Time your button presses to the rhythm and Mad Rat’s movements will be boosted, leaping further, flipping higher, and diving like a premiership footballer. Mistime the beat though, and it’ll be like Mad Rat’s wings have been clipped, sending the cute, but oh so angry vermin plummeting into the void of despair at the bottom o
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Highlights
Nightlife in China s Wuhan is back in full swing almost seven months after the city lifted its stringent lockdown
Wuhan hasn`t reported a new locally transmitted case of the disease since May 10.
In a crowded Wuhan beer hall, Zhang Qiong wipes birthday cake from her face after a food fight with her friends. After experiencing the first wave of epidemic in Wuhan and then the liberation, I feel like I`m living a second life, says Zhang, 29, who works in a textiles shop in the central Chinese city that was the original
Outside, maskless partygoers spill onto the streets, smoking and playing street games with toy machine guns and balloons.
The revival of the city s hard-hit nightlife offers a glimpse into a post-pandemic lifestyle.
Wuhan, China:
In a crowded Wuhan beer hall, Zhang Qiong wipes birthday cake from her face after a food fight with her friends. After experiencing the first wave of epidemic in Wuhan and then the liberation, I feel like I m living a second life, says Zhang, 29, who works in a textiles shop in the central Chinese city that was the original epicentre of COVID-19.
Outside, maskless partygoers spill onto the streets, smoking and playing street games with toy machine guns and balloons.
People eat at a street restaurant at night, almost a year after the global outbreak of the coronavirus disease in Wuhan.
Wooo-han! As Britain heads into an utterly miserable lock-down Christmas, one year on from outbreak at Coronavirus Ground Zero, young Chinese learn to party again
Nightlife in Wuhan, China - where the coronavirus is believed to have originated - is now back in full swing
Seven months after China lifted one of the world s strictest lockdowns, young party-goers are out celebrating
The resurgence of the city s nightlife offers a glimpse to others what a post-pandemic world might look like
The city of 11 million was shut off from the rest of China in a surprise overnight lockdown beginning Jan 23
But in a remarkable feat, Wuhan hasn t reported a new locally transmitted case of the disease since May 10
2-MIN READ
One Night in Wuhan: Coronavirus s Original Epicentre Re-learns How to Let Its Hair Down
People dance at a park at night, almost a year after the global outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Wuhan, Hubei province. REUTERS/Aly Song
Nightlife in Wuhan is back in full swing almost seven months after the city lifted its stringent lockdown and the city s young partygoers are embracing the catharsis.
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In a crowded Wuhan beer hall, Zhang Qiong wipes birthday cake from her face after a food fight with her friends. After experiencing the first wave of epidemic in Wuhan and then the liberation, I feel like I m living a second life, says Zhang, 29, who works in a textiles shop in the central Chinese city that was the original epicentre of COVID-19.