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Game » consists of 6 releases. Released Aug 30, 2001
The fourth game in the Guitar Hero series adds drums and vocals to the mix, along with a music studio that you can use to create new tracks and share them online.
Wii Music allows users to play and experiment with over 60 different instruments with up to three other players, focusing on fun and creativity instead of the "play as correctly as possible"-approach found in other music games.
Konami is getting back into the guitar and drums market with an all-new rhythm game called Rock Revolution.
Harmonix, MTV Games, and EA return with the sequel to Rock Band. Rock Band 2 ships with 84 on-disc songs, 20 free downloadable songs, compatibility with all DLC, and the ability to import most songs from the first Rock Band.
A Wii-exclusive motion-based rhythm game where fictional music bands (of different genres) fight for dominance. Features a dynamic music system where the genre can change completely at different points in the song.
Rock Band expands on the concepts Harmonix established in its Guitar Hero franchise by allowing players to play guitar, bass, drums, and sing to a variety of songs from various sub-genres and time periods.
The fourth installment of the series (Guitar Hero: Rock the 80's being the 3rd) that single handedly revitalized the music-game genre, Guitar Hero III retains the core gameplay of its predecessors while delivering a more challenging experience.
Guitar Hero II is the second entry into Harmonix's popular Guitar Hero franchise, adding more songs and several new gameplay features as well as bringing the franchise to the Xbox 360.
This PSP port of iNiS' unique PS2 rhythm game adds new stages, updated multiplayer modes and more.
Guitar Hero allows players to step into the shoes of a rock god and play some of the most famous guitar songs of all time.
Donkey Konga 3: Tabe-houdai! Haru Mogitate 50 Kyoku is the Japanese only third entry in the Donkey Konga franchise.
Donkey Konga 2 is the sequel to the 2004 Gamecube game Donkey Konga. It features 30 new songs and a variety of minigames.
Play the bongos with Donkey Kong in this first installment of Donkey Konga for the GameCube.
Bust a Groove 2 is the sequel to music/fighting game by Metro Graphics, Bust a Groove. It introduces new characters with a brand new song selection.
Cool Cool Jam is a rhythm game that was released on the Neo Geo Pocket Color.
SNK enter the rhythm genre with Cool Cool Toon on the Sega Dreamcast. One of their final games on the Dreamcast SNK offer a fun alternative to Sega's own Samba de Amigo with their take on PaRappa the Rapper.
TVDJ is an action/rhythm game that was only released in Japan by SCEI. An impressive early PS2 game, it has cel-shaded graphics and is fully voice acted. Unfortunately, the game is only a a handful of short 5-minute stages that end up feeling more like a mini-game.
In Space Channel 5 the player takes control of Ulala, a TV diva who has to out-dance evil aliens and rescue hostages as she tries to get her TV ratings to soar. The game also features a cameo from Michael Jackson.
While grossly overlooked in the U.S. market, Bust A Groove served as a gateway for many Japanese music game fans in the late 1990s, arriving on the scene courtesy of Enix and 989 Studios hot on the heels of Parappa the Rapper.
Help the Spice Girls prepare for a concert by choosing what song they sing, creating the order of the lyrics, choreographing their dance moves, and setting up the camera angles.
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