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Dancing Stage Euromix (PS)

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This game notably includes the songs "Celebrate Nite" and "Sexy Planet", credited to aliases of Naoki Maeda, which returned in Dance Dance Revolution Solo 2000 and later Dance Dance Revolution 4thMix Plus. With the exception of DDRMAX Dance Dance Revolution 6thMix, these songs were subsequently kept in every main DDR release, including the current title, Dance Dance Revolution A20. The core gameplay of Euromix 2 is similar to Euromix, but introduced the new two-tiered scoring system and freeze arrows to the European audience. As mentioned, Euromix 2 uses DDRMAX2's engine and interface but with some minor differences, such as Nonstop mode being accessed from the song wheel, difficulty selections being made before the song begins, and the options menu introduced by DDRMAX is not used, electing to still use step codes. These codes are entered on the song selection screen.

Dancing Stage EuroMIX 2 - The Cutting Room Floor Dancing Stage EuroMIX 2 - The Cutting Room Floor

Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix ( ダンスダンスレボリューションサードミックス, Dansu Dansu Reboryūshon SādoMikkusu), sometimes abbreviated as 3rdMix, is the third game in the Dance Dance Revolution series of music video games. It was released in Japanese arcades by Konami on Saturday October 30, 1999. The arcade machine is the first to be based on Bemani System 573 Digital. It has a total of 72 songs, 35 of which are new to the arcade series. Gerstmann, Jeff (March 15, 2000). "Dance Dance Revolution 2nd Mix Dreamcast Edition (Import) Review". GameSpot . Retrieved October 26, 2014. The arcade release of Dancing Stage EuroMix features a total of 34 songs, including 18 licensed songs and 16 Konami original songs. Six of the original songs require the Internet Ranking feature to be enabled, which can be done with a code by an arcade operator. Among the licenses, eight are from Universal Music Group, and this is the only appearance of these songs in a Konami arcade game. The ten other licenses are from Dancemania, which made their arcade debut in the Dance Dance Revolution series. "Dam Dariram" and "Do It All Night" also appear in StepManiaX by Step Revolution. a b Zell_KFF. "Dancing Stage Megamix Review". DDR:UK . Retrieved 1 January 2008. [ permanent dead link] The home version of this game contains a number of additional features that maybe were not plausible features for a game in an arcade environment. These include:The core gameplay of Euromix is the same as the previous Dancing Stage games. Euromix featured a brand new scoring system, instead of being heavily combo-based like the last two mixes, combos are of virtually no importance. The maximum score for each song is 10,000,000 (all Perfects). Perfects are worth twice as many points as Greats, and steps toward the end are worth progressively higher points than steps toward the beginning. In nonstop mode, a 2x, 3x and 4x multiplier apply to the 2nd, 3rd and 4th songs respectively, making a perfect nonstop worth 100,000,000 points. SO DEEP (PERFECT SPHERE REMIX): A trance song from Dancemania FantasiA. It is one of the fastest songs (140 BPM) to have a consistently high density of 1/16 notes. When DDRMAX was first released, many players thought the Heavy steps of the song deserved a 10-foot rating, but it only received a 9 when it was rated in DDRMAX2. On DDRMAX's Groove Radar, this song covers all of the chaos, voltage, and stream levels, with a full combo of 498 or 500 steps (depending on whether jumps are counted as one or two steps), which is higher than almost any other DDR stepchart. The combo for the Standard stepchart is also halved, making it 250 steps, as well as the Light stepchart which was halved, giving it 125 steps. Training mode - This mode allows the player to play through only certain sections of a song, with various options to change the speed at which the song plays, and how the on-screen arrows are displayed.

Dancing Stage: Euromix (Europe) PSX ISO - CDRomance Dancing Stage: Euromix (Europe) PSX ISO - CDRomance

Japan's AC Ver. "DDR (1.5) INTERNET RANKING Ver." ". Archived from the original on 2013-07-22 – via www.youtube.com. In Japan, Game Machine listed Dance Dance Revolution on their December 1, 1998 issue as being the most-successful dedicated arcade game of the month. [22] Along with its 2ndMix update, Dance Dance Revolution became the highest-grossing dedicated arcade game of 1999 in Japan. The game sold over 10,000 arcade cabinets by 1999. [23] Japan's PS Ver. "Dance Dance Revolution" ". Archived from the original on 2013-07-26 – via www.youtube.com. Dancing Stage is a series of music video games developed and published by Konami. It is a spin-off of Dance Dance Revolution for the European market as well as a few Japanese titles. Games were released for arcade, PlayStation, PlayStation 2 and Wii.Arcane Azmadi (2003-12-05). "What kind of pathetic feebs do they take us for?!". GameFAQs. Archived from the original on 7 April 2005 . Retrieved 11 September 2016. 27 songs is not good, no, not good at all Different versions of Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix were released for other countries in Asia. [13] The first release in 1999 removed four new songs, made "Strictly Business" unavailable outside of 2ndMix mode and had a bug when trying to enter the Shuffle modification. [14] Two versions of the game were later released exclusively in South Korea: VER.KOREA on April 1, 2000 and VER.KOREA2 on May 1, 2000. VER.KOREA features the same song changes found in the Asia version, but fixes the Shuffle bug and adds seven new Korean pop songs in 3rdMix and SSR modes. [15] VER.KOREA2 is identical to VER.KOREA, but adds nine more K-Pop songs. [16]

Dance Dance Revolution (1998 video game) - Wikipedia Dance Dance Revolution (1998 video game) - Wikipedia

The PlayStation version sold 1.27 million units in Japan [24] and 135,048 units in the United States, [25] for a combined 1,405,048 units sold. The game is based on the same interface as the Japanese game Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix, except with a songlist that is a cut-down hybrid of Dance Dance Revolution 2ndMix and Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix's songlists, with the addition of 8 European-exclusive songs. Unlike Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix, the home version of Dancing Stage EuroMIX does not feature "Edit Mode", a feature in which the player can create their own custom routines to songs featured in the game. This also means that the arcade version does not feature PlayStation-compatible memory card slots. Game IntroductionDo you have the rhythm? Then step up onto the stage and prove it! In this dancing game, move and groove to the music by stepping on the arrows as they scroll up the screen. Do well enough, and you progress to the next stage! In this Europe/UK-only release however, there are special song selections added that are ONLY this version!: Dancing Stage Universe is the European counterpart to the North American Dance Dance Revolution Universe series for the Xbox 360. Dancing Stage Universe was released in 2007 in Europe and Australia, while Universe 2 was released in 2008 for Europe only. Both games feature exclusive songs, replacing some of the North American songs. No European counterpart to Dance Dance Revolution Universe 3 was released, as Konami launched a Chinese edition of Universe 3 in 2009 instead. These games cannot be played on the Xbox One or newer consoles.Dancing stage Mega Mix (with Dance Mat) (PS2) Game Overview". Atari Australia. Archived from the original on 4 August 2008 . Retrieved 11 September 2016. Main articles: Music of Dance Dance Revolution (1998 video game) and Music of Dance Dance Revolution 2ndMix The core gameplay involves the player stepping their feet to correspond with the arrows that appear on screen and the beat. During normal gameplay, arrows scroll upwards from the bottom of the screen and pass over a set of stationary arrows near the top (referred to as the "guide arrows" or "receptors", officially known as the Step Zone). When the scrolling arrows overlap the stationary ones, the player must step on the corresponding arrows on the dance platform, and the player is given a judgement for their accuracy of every streaked note. The game still utilizes the jukebox-style song list but modifies it so that the highlighted song's CD is displayed to the front. Instead of being accessed through codes, players may choose a character through a dedicated screen. The game is the first to differentiate the colors of arrows based on their timing, an option known as "Vivid". Vivid is turned on by default in 3rdMix and 2ndMix Modes, but must be enabled with a code in SSR Mode, as "Flat" (all arrows are the same color; the previous arrow option) is turned on by default instead. Other new options added include Sudden (arrows appear midway through while rising up towards the Step Zone, a reverse of Hidden) and Stealth (arrows are invisible, requiring memorization) Lesson mode - Not to be confused with Training mode, this mode features a number of simple lessons to assist new players in learning the correct technique to playing the game.

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