The game begins with the player in control of a character called Yoyo, who must complete a set of basic training exercises from Gum to prove himself worthy of joining the GGs.[24] After completing these challenges, the game is interrupted by a pirate radio broadcast by 'DJ Professor K' who informs the player on the turmoil within Tokyo-to.[5] After this cutscene, the player is released into Tokyo-to itself, where they cover Dogenzaka Hill in graffiti, race a new skater named Beat and fight the authoritarian Rokkaku Group and their police force, the Rokkaku Police.[25]

Yoyo then tells the GGs what happened: he had heard of the Golden Rhinos and went searching for more information, and he had gotten caught.[38] After the rescue, the Golden Rhinos began tearing up the streets, which required the GGs to intervene.[39] As soon as they clean the streets of all the Golden Rhinos, DJ Professor K and his radio station is carried away and a mysterious Golden Rhino train needs to be defeated, they then defeat it.[39] The owner of the Rokkaku Group and mayor of Tokyo, Gouji Rokkaku, uses this time to broadcast an announcement to the city to gather at Shibuya Terminal. Here, he blares odd, creepy music from his strange tower. He absorbs all the people into the tower, telling them to "wipe the pitiful smiles off your face" and to "let the evil show, baby".[39][40][41]


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Jet Set Radio Future was initially coined under the name Jet Set Radio 2 and was scheduled as a Dreamcast game.[44] Lead art designer, Ryuta Ueda, and composer, Hideki Naganuma, both stated that the game is not a continuation of the original Jet Set Radio, but a remake taking place in an alternate reality.[45] After the Dreamcast's discontinuation, Sega left the console market and began developing and publishing games for other platforms, including extensively supporting Microsoft's Xbox.[46][47] During Tokyo Game Show 2001, both Microsoft and Sega announced a long-term, strategic alliance to bring future versions of Sega's great games to the Xbox. Both corporations announced an 11-title publishing alliance to premiere many of Sega's upcoming games on the platform. Chief Xbox officer, Robbie Bach, stated "Having Sega on board with Xbox is a huge win for gamers around the world". Bach also stated "The creative artists at Sega not only are going to deliver great Xbox games, they will help us establish the benchmark for great Xbox gaming experiences both on and offline". Sega of America president and CEO, Peter Moore, stated "We believe that Microsoft will be very successful with Xbox, which is why we have such a close, strategic relationship with them. Our world-renowned development studios have been very impressed with the Xbox hardware, and they are excited to bring new gaming experiences to consumers by utilizing the platform's power and network capabilities. We share Microsoft's commitment to broadband online gaming and will work with it to deliver the best content possible to gamers".[48]

Jet Set Radio Future first starts off in the garage, where newcomer Yoyo is attempting to join the GG's, a street gang that was founded by Corn. Corn assumes Yoyo is the pizza man, but notices he's not and directs him towards Gum who proceeds to teach Yoyo, and the player, the basics of the game. After the tutorials are completed, Yoyo is also directed towards Roboy, the game's save state. Once that is taken care of, Corn brings up the pirate radio station, Jet Set Radio, ran by DJ Professor K, who gives the lowdown on the current events of the street.

After the defeat of the Golden Rhinos bigwigs, DJ Professor K tries to inform the GG's on something but gets hijacked in the process, screaming out for help. Based on the little information they received, the gang heads off to the Skyscraper District and runs into Zero Beat who leads them to the Site of Tokyo Line. Professor K reveals that the Golden Rhinos are in his studio and that they brought a train-like machine to this area and urges the gang to shut the damn thing off. After defeating the Golden Rhinos machine, the story heads back to Shibuya Terminal where Rokkaku Gouji is now in control running a radio station called "Rokkaku Banzai Radio" and demands that people come to the bus terminal quickly.

At the bus terminal, Gouji thanks everyone for arriving and states that his tower is not finished and that he needs the people's voices to complete it. He proceeds to take the energy away from the citizens of Tokyo to power his tower, and states that Zero Beat are there to guide them. This leads into a Tagger's Tag around against the two Zero Beats. After their defeat, DJ Professor K comes back into the scene and proceeds to rename his radio station to Jet Set Radio Future, and monologues on how the future is one big blank slate. However, this is quickly put to a stop as Gouji reenters, and pulls in the current GG into his tower. This event leads into the final fight of the game where Gouji transforms into A.KU.MU, to which his sanity begins to crack, stating that the world "belongs" to him. After defeating A.KU.MU, Gouji returns back to normal and seemingly disappears with his tower exploding as he laughs maniacally.

An unspecified member of the GG's notes Gouji's disappearance and that Tokyo was saved, but the gang does not desire constant reminders of their heroic act, claiming it was not about that. All they wanted was to live freely where people get hyped for fun, with the leader, Corn, stating that it is time to turn on the radio.

The soundtrack for Jet Set Radio Future consists of 34 songs, with 30 of them being able to be heard on the in game radio station. The soundtrack is filled with returning artists from the first game such as Hideki Naganuma, Richard Jacques, Guitar Vader with original and remixed tracks, while some like Toronto, Deavid Soul, B.B. Rights, and Mic Harrison return in remixing roles. Newcomers include the Latch Brothers, BS 2000, the Prunes and Freestyle, Bran Van 3000 along with Summer Rose and Dizzy D, Bis, being remixed by Jason Famous, Russell Simins, Scapegoat Wax, and Cibo Matto. Most of the licensed music came from Grand Royal, a total of 11 songs, along with most of the licensed artists as well. Unlike Jet Set Radio there was no regional differences in the soundtrack, being the same across all region releases throughout.

So nostalgic, I remember when I see this game for the first time playing the secuence intro in a video game store's TV. I thought to myself if in the future I'll buy an X-Box, one of the first vg I'll buy it would be JSRF. Great Story. Great OST.


I've some of the tracks, but now maybe I can find the rest of them. Wonderful!

Ive never played jsrf, but ive been jearing alot about it latly. And just by litsening to a few songs. Of this ST i can alredy tell this game must be funky and fun as hell. Jet set radio has set the bar in videogame music. Heck you dont even need to like games to get into this Amazing sound track.Ive never head music like this before and sadly i dont think there will be anything like it for years to come.

hello guys, nice to meet you all, i recently got a modded xbox and i got coinops8 running on it, i played some good ol banjo kazooie before moving onto the main game i bought the system for, jet set radio, after ftping everything it just boots up into the sega logo and freezes, any help would be appreciated as i am a complete noob in this, i deleted the stuff in the x y and z partition and it semed to advance maybe a second more before freezing again, any help?

This question of how to attract younger operators also reveals deep divides in the ham community about the future of amateur radio. Like any large population, ham enthusiasts are no monolith; their opinions and outlooks on the decades to come vary widely. And emerging digital technologies are exacerbating these divides: Some hams see them as the future of amateur radio, while others grouse that they are eviscerating some of the best things about it.

Before we look to the future, let's examine the current state of play. In the United States, the ARRL, as the national association for hams, is at the forefront, and with more than 160,000 members it is the largest group of radio amateurs in the world. The 106-year-old organization offers educational courses for hams; holds contests where operators compete on the basis of, say, making the most long-distance contacts in 48 hours; trains emergency communicators for disasters; lobbies to protect amateur radio's spectrum allocation; and more.

Michel led the ARRL between October 2018 and January 2020, and he fits easily the profile of the average" American ham: The 66-year-old from Dartmouth, Mass., credits his career in electrical and computer engineering to an early interest in amateur radio. He received his call sign, WB2ITX, 50 years ago and has loved the hobby ever since.

For those younger people who are drawn to ham radio, up to those in their 30s and 40s, the primary motivating factor is different from that of their predecessors. With the Internet and social media services like WhatsApp and Facebook, they don't need a transceiver to talk with someone halfway around the world (a big attraction in the days before email and cheap long-distance phone calls). Instead, many are interested in the capacity for public service, such as providing communications in the wake of a disaster, or event comms for activities like city marathons.

There's something about this post-9/11 group, having grown up with technology and having seen the impact of climate change," Michel says. They see how fragile cellphone infrastructure can be. What we need to do is convince them there's more than getting licensed and putting a radio in your drawer and waiting for the end of the world."

The future lies in operators like Dhruv Rebba (KC9ZJX), who won Amateur Radio Newsline's 2019 Young Ham of the Year award. He's the 15-year-old son of immigrants from India and a sophomore at Normal Community High School in Illinois, where he also runs varsity cross-country and is active in the Future Business Leaders of America and robotics clubs. And he's most interested in using amateur radio bands to communicate with astronauts in space. ff782bc1db

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