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・ Dance Commander
・ Dance Concept
・ Dance Concerts, California 1958
・ Dance costume
・ Dance Council
・ Dance cover
・ Dance Craze
・ Dance critique
・ Dance Dance (film)
・ Dance Dance Dance (James Cottriall song)
・ Dance Dance Dance (novel)
・ Dance Dance Dance/My Lady
・ Dance Dance Dragon
・ Dance Dance Immolation
・ Dance Dance Revelation
Dance Dance Revolution
・ Dance Dance Revolution (1998 video game)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (2001 video game)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (2010 video game)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (2013 video game)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (book)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (disambiguation)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (TV video games)
・ Dance Dance Revolution (Windows video games)
・ Dance Dance Revolution 2ndMix
・ Dance Dance Revolution Dance Wars
・ Dance Dance Revolution Disney Grooves
・ Dance Dance Revolution Disney Mix
・ Dance Dance Revolution DVD Game
・ Dance Dance Revolution Extreme


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Dance Dance Revolution : ウィキペディア英語版
Dance Dance Revolution

, abbreviated DDR and also known as ''Dancing Stage'' in earlier games in Europe and Australasia, and some other games in Japan, is a music video game series produced by Konami. Introduced in Japan in 1998 as part of the Bemani series, and released in North America and Europe in 1999, ''Dance Dance Revolution'' is the pioneering series of the rhythm and dance genre in video games. Players stand on a "dance platform" or stage and hit colored arrows laid out in a cross with their feet to musical and visual cues. Players are judged by how well they time their dance to the patterns presented to them and are allowed to choose more music to play to if they receive a passing score.
''Dance Dance Revolution'' has been given much critical acclaim for its originality and stamina in the video game market. There have been dozens of arcade-based releases across several countries and hundreds of home video game console releases, promoting a music library of original songs produced by Konami's in-house artists and an eclectic set of licensed music from many different genres. The ''DDR'' series has inspired similar games such as ''Pump It Up'' by Andamiro and ''In the Groove'' by Roxor.
==Gameplay==
The core gameplay involves the player, stepping his or her feet to correspond with the arrows that appears 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 judgment for their accuracy of every streaked notes (From highest to lowest: Marvelous,〔First appeared in the Nonstop and Challenge mode of DDR Extreme and first used for normal gameplay as of DDR SuperNova 2.〕 Perfect, Great, Good, Almost,〔Boo for DDR 5thMIX and earlier. Not present in DDR X2 onwards.〕 Miss〔Boo for DDR SuperNOVA1, DDR SuperNOVA2, and DDR X only.〕).
Additional arrow types are added in later mixes. For instance, ''Freeze Arrows'' (introduced in DDRMAX) which is a long green arrow that must be held down until the tail of it reaches the Step Zone, that is given an "O.K.!" judgment if it succeed or "N.G." if fails to do so, or ''Shock Arrows'' (introduced in DDRX), walls of arrows with lightning effects which must be avoided, which are scored in the same way as Freezes (O.K./N.G.); if they are stepped on, a N.G. is awarded, the life bar decreases, and the steps become hidden for a short period of time. Until ''DDR SuperNOVA2'', the N.G. judgment did not break the combo, though it does decrease the life bar.
Successfully hitting the arrows in time with the music fills the "Dance Gauge", or life bar, while failure to do so drains it. If the Dance Gauge is fully depleted during gameplay, the player fails the song, usually resulting in a game over. Otherwise, the player is taken to the Results Screen, which rates the player's performance with a letter grade and a numerical score, among other statistics. The player may then be given a chance to play again, depending on the settings of the particular machine (the limit is usually 3-5 songs per game).
Aside from play style Single, Dance Dance Revolution provides two other play styles: Versus (Player 1 side of play style Single and player 2 side of play style Single playing together) and Double (One player utilizes both pads to play). Some games offer additional modes beyond these, such as Course mode (players must play a set of songs back-to-back) and Battle mode (two players compete with a tug-of-war life bar by sending distracting modifiers to each other). Earlier versions also have Couple/Unison Mode, where two players must cooperate to play the song. This mode later become the basis for "TAG Play" in newer games.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Dance Dance Revolution」の詳細全文を読む



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