Dancing Stage is a music video game, developed by Konami, released in European arcades on March 9, 1999. In North America, the game was released as Dance Dance Revolution on the same date, and it received a PlayStation port on March 6, 2001. It is the first international release of the game. The arcade version features 13 songs, with 11 of these available on the PlayStation port, while Dancing Stage Internet Ranking adds another three exclusive songs to arcades.

Dancing Stage
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
SeriesDance Dance Revolution
Engine2ndMix (Arcade)
3rdMix (PlayStation)
Platform(s)Arcade, PlayStation
ReleaseArcade
  • EU: March 9, 1999[1]
  • NA: March 9, 1999
PlayStation
  • NA: March 6, 2001
Genre(s)Music, Exercise
Mode(s)Single player, Multiplayer

Gameplay

edit

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.

Music

edit

All versions include the following songs:

  • "AM-3P" by kTz
  • "Boom Boom Dollar" by King Kong & D.Jungle Girls
  • "Brilliant 2U" by Naoki
  • "Brilliant 2U (Orchestra-Groove)" by Naoki
  • "Have You Never Been Mellow" by The Olivia Project
  • "Make It Better" by mitsu-O!
  • "My Fire" by X-Treme
  • "PARANOiA" by 180
  • "Put Your Faith In Me" by UZI-LAY
  • "Put Your Faith In Me (Jazzy Groove)" by UZI-LAY
  • "Trip Machine" by De-Sire

"Butterfly" by Smile.dk and "Make It Better (So-Real Mix)" by mitsu-O! are exclusive to the arcade release.

180, kTz, mitsu-O! and UZI-LAY are pen names for Naoki Maeda. Songs with "Groove" or "Mix" in the title require certain criteria to be unlocked by the player.

Dancing Stage Internet Ranking was released exclusively in Europe. It adds another three licensed covers, credited with the original artists:

Dance Dance Revolution courses[1][2]
No. Nonstop Songs
1 Simple Mix "Have You Never Been Mellow"
"Boom Boom Dollar"
"El Ritmo Tropical"
"Put Your Faith In Me"
2 Konami Mix "Let Them Move"
"Put Your Faith In Me"
"Keep On Movin'"
"Trip Machine"
3 Club Mix "20, November D.D.R. Version"
"My Fire"
"Drop the Bomb"
"AM-3P"
4 Weird Mix "Smoke"
"Paranoia"
"Get Up'n Move"
"Afronova"
5 Pop Mix "Keep On Movin'"
"Dub I Dub"
"I Believe In Miracles"
"If You Were Here"
6 Party Mix "Have You Never Been Mellow"
"El Ritmo Tropical"
"Make It Better"
"La Senorita"
7 Hard Mix "Put Your Faith In Me (Jazzy Groove)"
"Drop the Bomb"
"Brilliant2U"
"Dynamite Rave"
8 Random Mix ?
?
?
?

Reception

edit

It was a runner-up for GameSpot's annual "Best PlayStation Game" and "Best Music/Rhythm Game" awards, which went to Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 and Frequency, respectively.[5]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Neko Neko. "Dance Dance Revolution for Play Station (NTSC U/C)" (in Japanese). Archived from the original on September 19, 2010. Retrieved June 7, 2010.
  2. ^ Konami. DanceDanceRevolution (PlayStation). Konami. Level/area: Nonstop select screen.
  3. ^ "Dance Dance Revolution for PlayStation". GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  4. ^ "Dance Dance Revolution for PlayStation Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  5. ^ GameSpot VG Staff (February 23, 2002). "GameSpot's Best and Worst Video Games of 2001". GameSpot. Archived from the original on August 3, 2002.
edit
Preceded by
nothing
Dance Dance Revolution
2001
Succeeded by