Sensless bs between 2 stubborn people.B1rd wrote:
I need someone to TL;DR me this arguement.
Sensless bs between 2 stubborn people.B1rd wrote:
I need someone to TL;DR me this arguement.
failed communication between the alien and the humanB1rd wrote:
I need someone to TL;DR me this arguement.
180bpm 1/4 in osu terms, where each white tick is one beat.Infevo wrote:
So let me clear this up a little. You are saying that in a 180bpm 4/4 beat song streams are the 4ths. This means 180 clicks per minute? Hilarious =]Saphirshroom wrote:
I'm just gonna make up a statistic here and say that in 95% of all maps, streams are 1/4. Big Black was already mentioned along a few others but I can't remember any map I've played that doesn't handle it that way.
Besides, cheez was only showing that mappers use osu's system to count. Whether streaming is 1/4, 1/2 or 1/8 was irrelevant.
buny wrote:
It's satire
You're saying that one particular terminology is wrong, because it means something else in another.
If you fail to see the connection, you are an idiot
I am done conversing with you.
So, if mappers speak of 1/4s they refer to actual 16ths notes a musician would interpret as streams? Bpm is measured in whole notes instead of 1/4s. How do you call 1/2s and 1/1s?cheezstik wrote:
Why they are asking the bpm is because some maps are double BPM, such as Big Black, which is 360BPM instead of 180 (Which is what the song actually is), and uses 1/2 notes for the streams. Another example is GoldenWolf's Kage - unravel, which uses a really slow BPM but has some double speed (1/8) streams. Generally, 1/4 is the standard for streaming, used by freedom dive, d.m.c, gimme gimme, mendes, nearly any stream map you can think of off the top of your head.
I'm not sure, maybe 1/1 and 1/2 in music translated to osu are 1/0.25 and 1/0.5, kinda weird I guess, but you'll barely every see them anyway, so you won't have to refer to them nearly ever.Infevo wrote:
So, if mappers speak of 1/4s they refer to actual 16ths notes a musician would interpret as streams? Bpm is measured in whole notes instead of 1/4s. How do you call 1/2s and 1/1s?cheezstik wrote:
Why they are asking the bpm is because some maps are double BPM, such as Big Black, which is 360BPM instead of 180 (Which is what the song actually is), and uses 1/2 notes for the streams. Another example is GoldenWolf's Kage - unravel, which uses a really slow BPM but has some double speed (1/8) streams. Generally, 1/4 is the standard for streaming, used by freedom dive, d.m.c, gimme gimme, mendes, nearly any stream map you can think of off the top of your head.
Take any 1-2 star map. You'll have a snap div of 1/1 to map this more conventiently. Speaking in musician terms you will have several 1/2s and 1/1s notes.cheezstik wrote:
I'm not sure, maybe 1/1 and 1/2 in music translated to osu are 1/0.25 and 1/0.5, kinda weird I guess, but you'll barely every see them anyway, so you won't have to refer to them nearly ever.Infevo wrote:
So, if mappers speak of 1/4s they refer to actual 16ths notes a musician would interpret as streams? Bpm is measured in whole notes instead of 1/4s. How do you call 1/2s and 1/1s?
I went through the last pages and didn't see a single valid and reasonable statement from you. All you do is behave like scum.buny wrote:
are you going to keep addressing my insults and not bother reading my argument?
I gave you a reason and an example on the second post on why you are wrong, but I guess you would rather just cry about meanie words
buny wrote:
cheezstik has already elaborated itInfevo wrote:
Elaborate or shut up.
You don't go into a community and force a different terminology
You don't go to USA and force the metric system. You can bitch all you want about inches, feet, yards etc. but you're never going to change the system no matter what, and all you're doing is wasting your own time and everybody you're trying to argue with. In the end, the system they use is primitive and means the exact same thing translated
In osu!, they're called 2/1 and 4/1...well, at the very least, 2 beats of separation is called 2/1. I don't think I've ever seen someone use "4/1" to refer to anything because when there's that much separation it's just a short break and no one cares to refer to the interval.cheezstik wrote:
I'm not sure, maybe 1/1 and 1/2 in music translated to osu are 1/0.25 and 1/0.5, kinda weird I guess, but you'll barely every see them anyway, so you won't have to refer to them nearly ever.
Yet some people like to constantly stress "rhythm" game.ZenithPhantasm wrote:
This is osu not music class.
Yeah, you[-Cloud-] wrote:
And with people you mean that german guy.