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The turntable controller includes a rotatable turntable and three "stream" buttons, a crossfader, effects dial, and Euphoria button. Activision had initially applied for a trademark on the name DJ Hero in early 2008, leading to speculation that Activision was making plans to compete against Konami's Beatmania series of music video games with their own DJ game as a possible spinoff of their ...
The game was released worldwide in October 2010 for PlayStation 3, Wii, Xbox 360. DJ Hero 2 uses a special turntable-controller, the same as introduced in DJ Hero, to simulate turntablism, the act of creating a new musical work from one or more previously recorded songs using record players and sound effect generators.
The studio made more music-themed video games following its release, including Pop'n Music and Dance Dance Revolution. [6]: 54–58 [7]: 297 Bemani conceived Beatmania IIDX as a sequel to Beatmania. It was designed to simulate the experience of a DJ performing songs live at a music venue which gave it a "club Visual Jockey feel." The game was ...
Matt Helgeson of Game Informer considered it to be one of the "most adventurous" soundtracks of any music game, and said though it often relied too much on pop hits, it remained true to the spirit of the DJ mix scene. [6] Johnny Minkley thought the game to have "vital, varied, surprising and vast musical content" and to be a fresh experience ...
Beatmania is a music video game and part of the beatmania IIDX series. Designed for the North American market, it was the only beatmania IIDX game released in the region until the arcade release of beatmania IIDX 27 HEROIC VERSE in 2020. It was released by Konami for the PlayStation 2 on March 28, 2006. [1] [2]
This category contains music video games that simulate the use of a DJ's turntable for turntablism. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
Beatmania (ビートマニア) (styled as beatmania) is a rhythm video game developed and distributed by Japanese game developer Konami and first released in December 1997. It contributed largely to the boom of music games in 1998, and the series expanded not only with arcade sequels, but also moved to home consoles and other portable devices, achieving a million unit sales. [1]
This is a list of music video games, sorted alphabetically. The table can be sorted by a different column via clicking on the small box next to column heading. The table can be sorted by a different column via clicking on the small box next to column heading.