Monday, June 15, 2009

Ten Music Games That Aren't Guitar Hero, Rock Band, Or DDR


To find the article with pretty pictures and such, click here: http://www.cinemablend.com/games/Ten-Music-Games-That-Aren-t-Guitar-Hero-Rock-Band-Or-DDR-18128.html

Music based games are huge right now. Whether it’s that sweaty, three hundred pound guy down to a wife-beater shuffling his feet like lightning to DDR, or that five year old who can play Dragonforce on expert in Guitar Hero, the “rhythm genre,” which it’s so often called, is big business right now, and it only looks to be getting bigger. But what about those games that AREN’T the aforementioned three heavy weights that can’t AFFORD to have commercials with Heidi Klum gyrating in her underwear? What about THOSE games? Well, below, here are some other music based games that you may or may not have heard of over the past few years. Brace yourself, one of them is a Sega CD masterpiece. And by masterpiece, I mean, a master piece of emu dung sugar.


Gitaroo Man


Gitaroo Man has a pretty simple control scheme (All you pretty much do is direct the analog stick along to the melody coming at you on the screen), but it’s the strange storyline that manages to land this game in obscurity-ville with other titles like Ico and Beyond Good and Evil, which were great games that were too niche and artsy for their own darn good. No matter, Guitaroo Man was popular enough that a PSP version port, called Gitaroo Man Lives, was released, so if you didn’t get to play it then, you can play it now, and you really should, because it’s quirky enough to be put up there with Katamari Demacy. The story consists of you being the last legendary guitar player of a planet called Gitaroo. Whatever. All that matters is that the gameplay is addictive, and the music is fun and buoyant. What else do you want from a music game? A plastic guitar that comes with the game? Pfft, you’re asking too much!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8-4K5Q0Zc8


Mad Maestro!


A music game with CLASSICAL music? What was Eidos THINKING? Still, Mad Maestro! (And by the way, you can probably find it at your local supermarket, as that’s where I found it), is a really fun experience unlike any other music game of its time, which is probably why it failed. Today, Elite Beat Agents isn’t too different when it comes to erratic controls that go along with the music, but in its time, MANY people found Mad Maestro’s! controls to be too confusing and off putting, since you had to put emphasis on just HOW hard you moved the stick around, as well as focus on the overall melody of the song. You get used to it after awhile, but I understand why it wasn’t a runaway hit. Hopefully, this video below will clue you in to the brilliance of Mad Maestro!. Or not.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUDpKyAVew8


Get On Da Mic


Hip-hop gets the shaft when it comes to music games, and I’m pretty sure I know why. To cater to a larger audience, companies sort of have to stray away from that M rating when it comes to music related games, because quite frankly, if they’re selling a peripheral that comes with it, they don’t want to have a title that only a 17 and older crowd can purchase—they want parents picking those games up on Christmas! And that’s why Get On Da Mic fails, even though it actually has a pretty impressive track listing, mostly consisting of classics from the likes of 2Pac, Snoop, and Biggy. The songs are watered down, though to get that teen rating, so anybody expecting to say “bitch,” this, or “ho,” that, is going to be sorely disappointed. And unlike Guitar Hero or Rock Band where the lyrics play second fiddle to the actual music, for a game relying SOLELY on lyrics, it kind of hurts having to do the squeaky clean, kid tested, mother approved version of “Hypnotize.” And plus, it’s really just karaoke with Sir Mix-A-Lot, so yeah. Get On Da Mic really sucks. No diggity, no doubt.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-n2ZrbjbtJA

Samba De Amigo

Sega was really onto something with those maracas. Without a doubt, the original Samba De Amigo (And let’s please not talk about the Wii version, thank you very much), was as energetic as you were willing to make it, as the game could quite simply not be played sitting down. The rhythm was thunderous, the graphics were colorful, and the music was infectious. Also, the controls were flawless (At least, for the Dreamcast version) and the pose feature, which is where you pose in the direction they present on the screen, is a fun little addition, too. Find this game, play it, and enjoy life now! This game is the naz!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9e7vL5MH1o

Donkey Konga

Donkey Konga makes your palms hurt until you realize that all you really need to do is tap the side of the respective bongo to get it to register your hit. After that, Donkey Konga kind of loses its luster, but it’s still a great game all the same. Basically, it is what it sounds like—you play Konga like music on a bongo peripheral with the monkey known as Donkey at your side (And yes, thanks to Futurama, I now know that monkeys can’t be donkeys) while the music streams on by. Unfortunately, the track listing is less than stellar, but it’s fun while it lasts. It was definitely inspired, I’ll give it that.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YT7wjoKhdAQ

Space Channel Five

Why is Michael Jackson in this game? Because it’s the dancing-est, space age-enest (And yeah, I said it, space age-enest) game ever made, and it was more fun than you could ever imagine from mere still shots of it. Really, though, all it was was Simon Says, as the game would tell you where to move, and you would follow its commands. But the results were stunningly fun, and the better you got at it, the faster it went, and the more advanced the motions got. What was the story line? Please don’t ask me such things. It had something to do with a reporter in a mini skirt named Ulala blasting aliens or something like that. But the music was upbeat and stellar, and there was never a dull moment. There are rumors that a new one may be getting made in the not too distant future. But for the time being, watch this clip of Michael being Michael.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pnCvZ-yBOs


KORG DS-10


While not even really a game at all, KORG DS-10 is really the only title out there like it in that you can actually make real music on it. To do so, though, you REALLY need to be patient, as it’s not for the faint of heart who simply want to pick it up and play. The instructions for this one are thick, as they’re based off of the rudimentary commands of a KORG synthesizer, planted down in your DS. Using the stylus to manage through the various interfaces, you switch through the screens and tweak the beat to your liking. It takes some getting used to, but I made a few tracks that weren’t cringe worthy within the span of three hours or so. It’s not for everybody, and I’m shocked it was even made, but KORG DS-10 has its weight in gold if you’re honestly and truthfully passionate about making music.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGsTABRQbz8

Lumines

Okay, you got me, Lumines isn’t a music game, it’s really a regal puzzler in which music plays a part. But WHAT a large part it plays, as the game wouldn’t be nearly as enthralling without that pumping dance music rocking through the speakers as you match the two colors with each other to make a perfect square of a like color. I am VERY much in love with Lumines and put it up there with Tetris when it comes to puzzlers, and DDR when it comes to music. It’s the best of BOTH worlds. Play it now. Right this very instant. You will be dazzled, to the nth degree, no less. To the nth, the nth!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3dy5oOZp4Y

Um Jammer Lammy

The follow-up to Parappa the Rapper that nobody cared about, Um Jammer Lammy is another guitar based game, like Gitaroo Man, but played like the dog with the winter cap, with you pressing the buttons along with the notes that come along on the screen. The thing I remember most about this game though was that it was SO much harder to play than Parappa, which you could just pick up and play. Um Jammer Lammy was a real hit or miss experience, but one definitely worth checking out if you liked Parappa the Rapper. Just try to find it though. Go ahead, because it’s IMPOSSIBLE.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3zeR5_BoU-8&feature=related


Make My Video


If you want proof that God was a Nintendo fan back in the Sega/Nintendo wars, look no further than the Make My Video series, which was SO bad, that I’m pretty sure it put Sega back ten years (And my theory as to why Sega lost in the console wars as a whole, think about it). Full motion videos were all the rage with the infamous Sega CD (Whoooooa, Sewer Shark), but this batch of four—featuring Marky Mark, INXS, C+C Music Factory, and Kriss Kross—was the absolute lowest you could get. I can’t even DESCRIBE how bad these games are, but this guy can. Watch both videos. So true, so true.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDH-d3VFlBs

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWAlmmOsMKw&feature=related

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