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Musical statues is a game played at birthday parties. Originating from the United Kingdom, [1] the game is similar to musical chairs and is part of the "Jerusalem games", of which elimination is an element. It is also known as freeze dance in the United States [2] and statue dance in Philippines.
Just Dance (video game) Just Dance 2; Just Dance: Best Of; Just Dance 3; Just Dance 4; Just Dance 2014; Just Dance 2015; Just Dance 2016; Just Dance 2017; Just Dance 2018; Just Dance 2019; Just Dance 2020; Just Dance 2021; Just Dance 2022; Just Dance 2023 Edition; Just Dance 2024 Edition; Just Dance 2025 Edition; Just Dance Kids (2010 video ...
Like its predecessor, Just Dance Kids 2 is a dance-based music game with an emphasis on songs that are popular with children. The game was released on October 25, 2011 in North America, November 3, 2011 in Australia and November 4, 2011 in Europe and contains 40 songs.
ParaParaParadise (パラパラパラダイス, Para Para Paradaisu) is an arcade and PlayStation 2 dance game made by the Japanese company Konami and released under the Bemani moniker following the Para Para fad. Konami would later release Dance Evolution for the Xbox 360, a game that shares many similarities with Para Para Paradise.
Dance Dance Revolution GB: Game Boy Color: 2000-08-03 Dance Dance Revolution GB2: Game Boy Color 2000-11-16 Oha Suta Dance Dance Revolution GB: Game Boy Color 2001-02-08 Dance Dance Revolution GB3: Game Boy Color 2001-03-15 Dance Dance Revolution GB Disney Mix: Game Boy Color 2001-03-29 Dance Dance Revolution Disney Dancing Museum [5]
Dancing Stage is a music video game, developed by Konami, released in arcades on March 9, 1999. This game was released as Dance Dance Revolution in North America. It includes 13 songs: nine composed by Naoki Maeda, and four licenses.
Dance Aerobics, released in Japan as Aerobics Studio (エアロビスタジオ, Earobi Sutajio), is a music video game developed by Human Entertainment for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was released in Japan by Bandai in February 1987 and North America by Nintendo in March 1989.
Dance Dance Revolution: No hands officially. A single song in Dancing Stage 1.5 (Uh La La La Maniac Single) features one hand due to an oversight, a single song in Ultramix 2 (Skulk Challenge Single) features at least one hand but the chart is unused and inaccessible without hacking the game, and four songs in Solo 2000 [ citation needed ...