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We Sing is a 2009 music video game for Wii, re-released in 2016 for Xbox One and PlayStation 4. [1] It was developed by French studio Le Cortex, produced by Wired Productions and published by Nordic Games. It is the first singing game to support 4 players simultaneously each with their own microphone. [2]
Karaoke Joysound (カラオケJOYSOUND) is a karaoke service and online song library from Japanese karaoke service provider Xing. The Joysound service, which started on various karaoke computers, was adapted into a video game by Hudson Soft for Wii, licensing the Joysound online song library alongside Xing, who also helped co-develop the game with Hudson.
Video games that use a microphone or headset as a control system. This might be with a plug-in device, such as the PlayStation 2 Headset, or with system with a built-in microphone such as the Nintendo DS.
We Sing Robbie Williams is the third game in the We Sing series for the Wii, following on from We Sing Encore. Developed by French studio Le Cortex, produced by Wired Productions, and published by Nordic Games Publishing. The game supports up to 4 players simultaneously, who can each use their own microphone.
Tyler Treese of Nintendo World Report gave the game 5.5 out of 10 and summarized: "Let’s Sing Country is a totally fine karaoke game that has a pretty lacking tracklist. It has made the conversion to Switch just fine as it’s easy to read the lyrics even in handheld mode and the mobile phone app means you don’t need microphones to have fun.
We Sing Encore is the 2010 music video game sequel to the original We Sing for the Wii.Developed by French studio Le Cortex, produced by Wired Productions, and published by Nordic Games, it is the latest singing game in the series to support 4 players simultaneously each with their own microphone.
Just Sing is divided into "Party" and "Battle" modes; Party mode allows players to record lip sync music videos, while Battle is a competitive mode. The game supports the use of a companion mobile app for Android and iOS smartphones, which utilizes the device's internal microphone and camera in-game (as opposed to a wired USB microphone).
Boogie is a music video game developed by Electronic Arts for the Wii, PlayStation 2 and Nintendo DS. Being touted as a party-game, it enables players to create their character, then use the Wii Remote and a microphone to sing and dance through it. [6] Each song within the game can be performed either as a karaoke or as a dancing game.