Tokyo Xtreme Racer revient avec une Street Racing action remaniée !
Préparez-vous à vivre le frisson des courses de rue avec le retour de Tokyo Xtreme Racer ! Ce classique culte est de retour, et c'est l'occasion idéale de comprendre son attrait unique. Des duels intenses en tête-à-tête aux nombreuses options de personnalisation des voitures, découvrez ce qui fait de ce jeu un favori intemporel.
Derniers articles
It sounds like you're referencing a playful or in-joke term — "Duck Bucket Added to Fix Duck Issue" — which might be a humorous way of referring to a bug fix in a codebase, possibly in a game, software, or meme culture.
Here’s a lighthearted interpretation:
"Duck Bucket Added to Fix Duck Issue"
→ A comically verbose commit message that sounds like it’s overcomplicating a simple fix, possibly referring to:
A bug where ducks were behaving oddly (e.g., floating, not spawning, or getting stuck).
The "Duck Bucket" being a new item, container, or logic block added to solve the issue.
A running joke in a dev team or community about using absurdly named tools to fix silly bugs.
💡 In real software terms:
This could be a parody of overly dramatic commit messages like:
"Added Duck Bucket to resolve flapping duck anomaly in swamp subsystem"
"Refactored duck spawn logic using bucket-based containment to fix waddle instability"
If you’re making this up for fun, it’s a solid meme.
If you’re actually debugging a "duck" issue in code, maybe you’ve got a rogue Duck object, a physics glitch, or a typo like duck vs ducky?
Let me know — I’ll help you fix the duck… or at least add a bucket to the story. 🦆🦆🦢
(And yes, I approve of the Duck Bucket.)
En lisant