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** Hell, you'd be hard pressed to find a Rhapsody of Fire album or song title that doesn't. Even more so, ridiculously many of them are in a "[[The X of Y|Noun Of Adjective Noun]]" format, with the nouns and adjectives seemingly randomly picked from the list. |
** Hell, you'd be hard pressed to find a Rhapsody of Fire album or song title that doesn't. Even more so, ridiculously many of them are in a "[[The X of Y|Noun Of Adjective Noun]]" format, with the nouns and adjectives seemingly randomly picked from the list. |
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** The band's name itself falls under this trope! |
** The band's name itself falls under this trope! |
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* [[ |
* [[DragonForce]]'s songs tend to embody this trope. |
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** Cracked has even made a [http://www.cracked.com/article_15123_five-most-unintentionally-funny-albums-2006.html word count chart] for their album "Inhuman Rampage". |
** Cracked has even made a [http://www.cracked.com/article_15123_five-most-unintentionally-funny-albums-2006.html word count chart] for their album "Inhuman Rampage". |
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* [[Nanowar of Steel]] specializes in mockery of metal bands that take themselves too seriously |
* [[Nanowar of Steel]] specializes in mockery of metal bands that take themselves too seriously and/or try to look and sound "manly" too hard, so their albums and songs that aren't named in parody of famous titles tend to be over-the-top examples of this. [[Heavy Mithril]] and/or [[Heavy Meta]] are always an option. This approach is nicely complemented with two secondary principles: |
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# A little redundancy cannot spoil the soup. For example: ''"Power Of The Power Of The Power Of The Power (Of The Great Sword)"''. |
# A little redundancy cannot spoil the soup. For example: ''"Power Of The Power Of The Power Of The Power (Of The Great Sword)"''. |
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# When in doubt, adding "...of steel" at the end can improve ''anything''. For example: ''"Triumph Of True Metal Of Steel"''. Or the band's new name, yes. |
# When in doubt, adding "...of steel" at the end can improve ''anything''. For example: ''"Triumph Of True Metal Of Steel"''. Or the band's new name, yes. |