North American DanceDanceRevolution Games: Difference between revisions

From RemyWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 8: Line 8:
** A collection of 27 songs from the AC/CS releases of the Japanese games from [[AC DDR 1st|DanceDanceRevolution 1st]] through [[CS DDR 3rdReMIX|3rdREMIX]]. [[SMOKE]]'s background is edited to meet ESRB standards. Interface is based on [[AC DDR 3rd|DDR 3rdMIX]].
** A collection of 27 songs from the AC/CS releases of the Japanese games from [[AC DDR 1st|DanceDanceRevolution 1st]] through [[CS DDR 3rdReMIX|3rdREMIX]]. [[SMOKE]]'s background is edited to meet ESRB standards. Interface is based on [[AC DDR 3rd|DDR 3rdMIX]].


* [[CS DDR Disney Mix|DanceDanceRevolution Disney MIX]]
* [[CS DDR Disney's RAVE|DanceDanceRevolution Disney MIX]]
** A loose port of [[AC DS Disney's RAVE|Dancing Stage featuring Disney's RAVE]], containing only 19 songs versus the original game's 25. All of the Disney covers (except [[ELECTRICAL PARADE (Retro Future MIX)]]) remain, but all of the Club Disney licenses aside from [[(Are You Ready) Do The Bus Stop]] have been removed, as have several original licenses. Some of the slots have been filled with DDR originals from [[AC DDR 4th|DanceDanceRevolution 4thMIX]] and its [[CS DDR 4th|CS counterpart]]. The staff credits have also been removed from the post-game credits, though the video itself still plays when you finish Arcade mode. On the plus side, all songs have new Single MANIAC charts now.
** A loose port of [[AC DS Disney's RAVE|Dancing Stage featuring Disney's RAVE]], containing only 19 songs versus the original game's 25. All of the Disney covers (except [[ELECTRICAL PARADE (Retro Future MIX)]]) remain, but all of the Club Disney licenses aside from [[(Are You Ready) Do The Bus Stop]] have been removed, as have several original licenses. Some of the slots have been filled with DDR originals from [[AC DDR 4th|DanceDanceRevolution 4thMIX]] and its [[CS DDR 4th|CS counterpart]]. The staff credits have also been removed from the post-game credits, though the video itself still plays when you finish Arcade mode. On the plus side, all songs have new Single MANIAC charts now.



Revision as of 01:56, 6 September 2013

Here is a listing of all the North American DanceDanceRevolution console game releases. Songs are listed by system in order of release. Little blurbs will be added below if applicable.

This page is VERY much under construction.

PlayStation

PlayStation 2

  • DDRMAX: DanceDanceRevolution
    • A collection of 71 songs, though few of them are from the original DDRMAX arcade game (only one license, ORDINARY WORLD, made the cut), though most of the CS crossovers and a few of the new Konami originals are in this mix. Most of the songlist consists of DDR Konami originals and Dancemania licenses from DanceDanceRevoluton 2ndMIX through 5thMIX, some of which (like THE CUBE and many of the Club songs) have never appeared in a Japanese PS2 release. Also includes 5 new BEMANI crossovers, 5 new licenses, and 4 new remixes by Sota Fujimori. Also has Oni Mode, even though the original DDRMAX had no courses. First US CS DDR game with Information Mode, which includes detail on each song and other info tracked by the game.
  • DDRMAX2: DanceDanceRevolution
    • A collection of 69 songs, with slightly more accuracy to the arcade DDRMAX2 release than DDRMAX US CS was. However, it only includes 7 of the Challenge-only charts. Most notable among the various Konami originals / Dancemania revivials is the return of GHOSTS (VINCENT DE MOOR MIX), which finally has foot ratings. Beginner and Challenge charts make their US CS debut, and a traditional Challenge Mode replaces the 4-bar version from the original arcade game (the music is also replaced). Some of the licenses have their own videos, a first in the CS DDR series, and a trait that eventually the Japanese games would copy. THE WHISTLE SONG (Blow My Whistle Bitch) was renamed to to THE WHISTLE SONG (Blow My Whistle Baby) to keep the game's E rating, though the song itself is not edited. Overall the US DDRMAX2 includes 8 new licenses, 3 new CS songs, and 4 new BEMANI crossovers.
  • DanceDanceRevolution EXTREME US
    • A collection of 70 songs, with very few of the songs being from the original arcade release. Only three new songs remain from the arcade release; The legend of MAX, TRIP MACHINE survivor, and MEMORIES. Most of the other songs, as usual, are older Konami originals and Dancemania licenses. The latter has two noteworthy songs; the first is DON"T CLOCK ME, the only Dancemania license from Solo BASS MIX (not counting GET UP'N MOVE) to ever appear in a US CS DDR game. The other is THERE YOU'LL BE, which makes its first CS appearance in any region. THEME FROM ENTER THE DRAGON (Revival 2001 Mix) was renamed THEME FROM ENTER THE DRAGON (notorious mix). A completely new interface involving a jukebox like songwheel replaces the original game's, along with a new scoring system similar to 4thMIX; songs are worth 7,000,000 points at max (bonus points are distributed after the song is over), and you must full combo a song now to AA it. On the plus side, the new game interface restores the top and bottom parts of the playing field that have removed since 5thMIX, allowing you to see better the arrows from below. Several of the new licenses are covers from Karaoke Revolution to advertise that series' release. First US CS PS2 DDR release with Mission Mode, a mode in the earlier Japanese DDR titles where you completed certain requirements. Completing this mode unlocks everything in the game, but you have to play a certain amount of songs first to unlock it. Overall, EXTREME US has 13 new licenses and 4 CS songs (though two of them come from the Silent Hill game series). There are no new BEMANI crossovers.

PlayStation 3

Nintendo Gamecube

  • DanceDanceRevolution MARIO MIX
    • Only GameCube DDR game. Most of the songs are remixes of songs from Nintendo's Mario games, as well as classical remixes. Uses the DDRMAX-SuperNOVA2 announcer.

Nintendo Wii

Xbox

Xbox 360

PC