Beatmania IIDX 17: Sirius | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo |
Publisher(s) | Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo |
Series | Beatmania IIDX , Bemani |
Platform(s) | Arcade |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Music |
Mode(s) | Single-player & Multiplayer |
Arcade system | Konami Bemani PC Type 2 |
Beatmania IIDX 17: Sirius is the 17th installment in Konami's Beatmania IIDX series of music video games. The main motif of Sirius's UI is astronomy, as the game is named after Sirius, known to be the brightest star in the night sky. Public location tests began on May 27, 2009, [1] and the game itself was released on October 21, 2009. [2]
The existence of a 17th version in the beatmania IIDX series was confirmed by Konami on May 25, 2009, alongside the announcement of the first public location tests at the Cat's Eye arcade in Japan, [1] which had already been promoting the location tests set to begin on the 27th of May for several days before the official announcement. [3]
The location tests revealed new features contained in the game, such as "charge notes", and contained a sampling of songs slated to be included in the final release. [4] Additional tests were held in late June to early July in Nagoya and at an arcade at the Norbesa in Sapporo. [5]
Beatmania IIDX tasks the player with performing songs through a controller consisting of seven key buttons and a scratchable turntable. [6] Hitting the notes with strong timing increases the score and groove gauge bar, allowing the player to finish the stage. Failing to do so depletes the gauge until it is empty, abruptly ending the song. [7]
Sirius adds two additional note types to the game, "charge notes", or Hold-me Notes which must be held for their duration, and the "back spin scratch", a type of scratching which must be spun on one direction continuously and spun again to the opposite side at the end of the note. Selected songs contained these features in the location test build. [3]
A new "party mode" consists of a story mode where players earn "fans" based on their performances. [2]
Another new mode, "League Mode" is a course where each song is selected based on the grade that they chose, from D grade to S grade. Songs chosen and the score that earns will convert into League points in the end. The selected songs number is ranged from 4 to 12. The score from this mode is also available to upgrade their own standards. [2]
There are 66 new songs and 512 songs carried over from previous releases for a total of 578 songs in this game. The entire song list contains songs by Konami original artists and others. [2]
Genre | Song | Artist | Tier |
---|---|---|---|
E-Dance Pop | "beatchic☆仮面~好き、でいさせて~" | 上野圭市 (transforming into Masao♥Lovely) feat. 星野奏子 | |
Electropop | "being torn the sky" | 猫叉Master+ feat. JUNE | |
Happy hardcore | "bloomin' feeling" | Ryu☆ | |
Latin house | "Brazilian Fire" | Ben Franklin | |
Trip hop | "Chocolate Dancing" | Yoche feat.Mayu | |
Electro | "Do Back Burn" | PRASTIK DANCEFLOOR | |
UK hardcore | "DESIRE" | M-Project fw. GUHROOVY | |
Hardcore techno | "DOMINION" | L.E.D.-G | |
White Sequence | "DROP" | dj TAKA feat. Kanako Hoshino | |
Trance-core | "Elisha" | DJ YOSHITAKA | |
Cyberpunk | "Empire State Glory" | Dirty Androids | |
Hardcore techno | "GALGALIM" | L.E.D. | |
Tech-dance | "Hydrogen Blueback" | MAD CHILD | |
Eurobeat | "Keep it -秋葉工房Mix-" | DJ Command feat.NAGISA | |
Electro | "Last Burning" | Dirty Androids | |
Bubblegum dance | "Light Shine" | Ryu☆ | |
Serious Step | "London Affairs Beckoned With Money Loved By Yellow Papers." | Paddington Private Detective | |
Buchiage trance | "MIRACLE MEETS" | Lucky Vacuum | |
Electropop | "MIRU key way" | Jacca PoP | Licensed song. |
Eurobeat | "Mysterious Time" | Y&Co. | |
Only One Idol Song | "NEW SENSATION -もう、あなたしか見えない-" | SUPER HEROINE 彩香 -AYAKA- | |
Electropop | "NoN-Fiction Story!" | Creative Life | |
Techno, dance | "One of A Kind" | Crystal Begley | |
Psy Trance (Morning) | "Programmed Sun" | kors k | |
Astral Choir | "Raison d'être~交差する宿命~" (Raison d'être -Intersection of Fates-) | Zektbach | |
Tech-breakbeats | "Red, by Full Metal Jacket" | DJ Mass MAD Izm* | |
Actress | "Roots of my way!" | ナイア (Voiced by Masumi Asano) | |
Only One Ballad | "She is my wife" | SUPER STAR 満-MITSURU- | Appeared in DDR X2. |
Emo | "Sorrows" | Asako Yoshihiro | from Pop'n Music 16: Party. |
Drum'N'Metal | "Sunrise" | good-cool ft. KOЯO | |
Club 80's | "To the Future" | seiya-murai | |
Electro | "with me..." | Sōta Fujimori feat. Kemy | |
Insanio | "かずあそび" (Kazuasobi) | CULTVOICE by S.S.D.PRODUCTS | |
J-pop | "コスモス" (Cosmos) | TSU-NA | |
Distorted new age | "バビロニア" (Babylonia) | 劇団レコード | |
モッシュ (Moshing) | "フェティッシュペイパー ~脇の汗回転ガール~ (Fetish Paper ~Waki no Ase Kaiten Girl~) | ガキ大将ティーム | |
Star pop | "未来のプリズム" (Mirai No Prism / Prism of Future) | 星野奏子 | |
Pops | "たからもの" (Takaramono) | セリカ&エリカ (Voiced by Mai Nakahara & Rina Satō) | Party Mode Secret Song. |
Electric Fusion | "Session 1 -Genesis-" | PRASTIK DANCEFLOOR | Extra Stage. |
Industrial | "Bad Maniacs" | kors k as teranoid | One More Extra Stage. |
The "Parallel Rotation" is an Extra Stage system contained within Sirius, containing various tiers based on previous releases of the Beatmania IIDX franchise, each containing various remixes of songs from their respective title and songs previously exclusive to their respective home version.
Genre | Song | Artist | Tier |
---|---|---|---|
Hardcore | "eRAseRmOToRpHAntOM" | L.E.D.-G VS GUHROOVY | P.R. RED |
Psychedelic trance | "spiral galaxy -L.E.D. STYLE SPREADING PARTICLE BEAM MIX-" | Remixed by L.E.D.. | P.R. RED |
World/Electronica | "水上の提督 (Short mix from "幻想水滸伝V")" (The Dahak's Departure) | 猫叉Master | P.R. RED |
Valse | "ワルツ第17番 ト短調"大犬のワルツ" (Waltz No. 17 in G minor, "Valse du Grande Chien") | virkato | P.R. RED Extra |
Drum and bass | "DAWN -THE NEXT ENDEAVOUR-" | L.E.D. fw.堀澤麻衣子 | P.R. Happy Sky |
Trance | "SPARK ! -essential RMX-" | Remixed by dj TAKA VS PINK PONG. | P.R. Happy Sky |
World/Electronica | "サヨナラ・ヘヴン" (Sayonara Heaven) | 猫叉Master | P.R. Happy Sky |
Hardcore techno | "EXUSIA" | L.E.D.-G | P.R. Happy Sky Extra |
Sublime Techno | "CaptivAte ~裁き~(SUBLIME TECHNO MIX)" | Remixed by DJ YOSHITAKA. | P.R. DistorteD |
Trance | "quell ~the seventh slave~" | dj TAKA Vs. DJ YOSHITAKA | P.R. DistorteD |
Hardstyle | "SOLID STATE SQUAD" | kors k Vs. L.E.D. | P.R. DistorteD |
Experimental music | "G59" | 怒れる金の獅子 | P.R. DistorteD Extra |
Psyche Trance | "DENJIN AKATSUKINI TAORERU -SF PureAnalogSynth Mix-" | Remixed by Sota Fujimori. | P.R. Gold |
Epic trance | "The Story Begins" | SADA & Sota | P.R. Gold |
Techno | "GOLDEN CROSS" | dj REMO-CON VS dj TAKA | P.R. Gold |
Techno Pop Speed | "mosaic" | Auridy | P.R. Gold Extra |
Drum and bass | "BEAUTIFUL ANGEL" | DJ SWAN (Toshiaki Komiya & Keiichi Ueno) | P.R. DJ Troopers |
Eurobeat | "Dazzlin' Darlin -秋葉工房Mix-" | Remixed by DJ Command. | P.R. DJ Troopers |
Drum & Bass | "THE LAST STRIKER" | L.E.D. | P.R. DJ Troopers |
Next Skool Breakbeats Hardcore | "D" | Eagle | P.R. DJ Troopers Extra |
Akashic Records | "Almagest" | Galdeira (DJ YOSHITAKA & TOMOSUKE) | P.R. One More Extra Stage |
Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius can be linked with jubeat ripples which can unlock new songs for both games. Starting from March 8, 2010, the player can unlock "bass 2 bass", "IN THE NAME OF LOVE", and "Special One" using saved data of jubeat ripples on e-AMUSEMENT. Then, starting from March 18, 2010, if the player has played those three unlocks on Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius, the player may unlock "AIR RAID FROM THA UNDAGROUND" in thecthen-newly released jubeat ripples APPEND. After playing that song, it would also unlock in Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius. Finally, after playing all four songs above on Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius, "Evans" will be unlocked on that game.
Genre | Song | Artist | Tier |
---|---|---|---|
Bubblegum Dance | "bass 2 bass" | Ryu☆ | Jubeat ripples x Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius from Jubeat |
Eurobeat | "IN THE NAME OF LOVE" | Y&Co. feat. Erica | Jubeat ripples x Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius from Jubeat |
J-House | "Special One" | kors k feat. Suzuyo Miyamoto | Jubeat ripples x Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius from Jubeat |
Speedcore | "AIR RAID FROM THA UNDAGROUND" | GUHROOVY | Jubeat ripples APPEND x Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius |
Hard Renaissance | "Evans" | DJ YOSHITAKA | Jubeat ripples APPEND x Beatmania IIDX 17 Sirius from Jubeat |
Beatmania (ビートマニア) is a rhythm video game developed and distributed by Japanese game developer Konami and first released in December 1997. It contributed largely to the boom of music games in 1998, and the series expanded not only with arcade sequels, but also moved to home consoles and other portable devices, achieving a million unit sales. The Bemani line of music games from Konami is named after the series, was first adopted in the arcade release of Beatmania 3rdMix and kept ever since. The series came to an end with the last game being Beatmania The Final, released in 2002.
Beatmania IIDX is a series of rhythm video games, that was first introduced by Konami in Japan on February 26, 1999. IIDX has since spawned 31 arcade releases and 14 console releases on the Sony PlayStation 2. It is the sequel to the beatmania game series, and part of the Bemani line of music games. A PC release titled beatmania IIDX INFINITAS has been released, beginning alpha testing in September 2015, and was heavily updated to a new version in 2020.
Bemani, stylized as BEMANI, is Konami's music video game division. Originally named the Games & Music Division (G.M.D.), it changed its name in honor of its first and most successful game, Beatmania, and expanded into other music-based games, most notably rhythm games such as Dance Dance Revolution, Guitar Freaks, and Drum Mania.
beatmania IIDX 10th Style is the tenth game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in early 2004.
Beatmania IIDX 9th Style is the ninth game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in 2003. The game features over 50 new songs, some of which can be unlocked using Konami's e-Amusement platform – which made its official debut on 9th Style.
beatmania IIDX 8th Style is a 2002 arcade game released by Konami. A PlayStation 2 version was released in 2004.
beatmania IIDX 7th Style is the seventh game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in March 2002.
Beatmania IIDX 6th Style is the sixth game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games released in arcades by Konami in 2001 and features 40 new songs. 6th Style introduced new features such as letter grades and the new hard mode.
beatmania IIDX 5th Style is the fifth game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in 2001. The game features 35 new songs, five of which are hidden. New features introduced in this version are auto-scratch, as well as two more Hi-Speed settings 5th Style's songlist featured the first songs that would later become "flashing 7s", here differentiated from regular 7s with a kanji meaning "forbidden".
beatmania IIDX 3rd Style is a music video game developed by Bemani and published by Konami, initially released as an arcade game in Japan on February 25, 2000, and subsequently ported to the PlayStation 2 on November 2. 3rd Style removed the 4-keys mode from previous installments and replaced it with the Light7 difficulty, giving most songs a fully separate, easier notechart. The game also introduced Free Mode and Extra Stage, and featured a new aesthetic.
Jubeat, stylized as jubeat, is a series of arcade music video games developed by Konami Computer Entertainment Japan, and is a part of Konami's Bemani line of music video games. The series uses an arrangement of 16 buttons in a 4x4 grid for gameplay, a grid also used for the displaying of cues and part of the user interface.
Beatmania IIDX is an arcade music video game developed by Bemani and published by Konami. It was released in Japan on February 26, 1999. The objective is to perform songs using a controller with seven keys and a turntable. After the surprise success of Beatmania, Benami conceived IIDX to simulate an actual disc jockey (DJ) live performance. Its arcade cabinet contains a widescreen monitor, speakers, and eight spotlights. Bemani later developed several updated versions of IIDX to increased success. The game retrospectively received a positive reception from video game publications for its gameplay and increased difficulty. A sequel, Beatmania III, was released in 2000.
Beatmania IIDX 16: Empress is the 16th game in the Beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami on November 19, 2008. The game features over 50 new songs, some of which are unlocked over Konami's e-Amusement platform. The design of Empress's interface is based on a pink color scheme, dominated by sparkles, butterfly wings, and motifs of royalty and jewellery. A PlayStation 2 port for the game was released on October 15, 2009 in Japan.
Dance Dance Revolution X2 is a music video game, and a part of the Dance Dance Revolution series. The arcade version of DDR X2 was revealed by Konami on November 20, 2009. The sequel to Dance Dance Revolution X, X2 began public beta testing on November 25, 2009. The game was released in Japan and Asia on July 7, 2010, North America on December 31, 2010, and Europe on May 13, 2011. It was the last arcade installment of Dance Dance Revolution with international releases until Dance Dance Revolution A.
Beatmania IIDX 18 Resort Anthem is a music video game in the Beatmania IIDX series of games by Konami. On April 19, 2010, Bemani fansite Zenius -I- Vanisher reported that Konami had announced the first location test for the newest game in the IIDX series. The location test ran from April 22 to April 26 at the Cat's Eye Machida (キャッツアイ町田) in Machida, Tokyo. Follow-up location tests ran in Chōfu, Tokyo and Kyoto from April 30 to May 6, in Nagoya and Sapporo from May 14 to May 20 and in Chiyoda, Tokyo from June 11 to June 12. The game was released on September 15, 2010 This Beatmania iteration's theme focuses heavily on a futuresque modern relaxation and tropical beach resort concert-like setting, with the interface making use of sleek mechanical components with simple whites and bright colors that are easy on the eyes.
Beatmania IIDX 19: Lincle is the 19th installment of Beatmania IIDX series. The location test itself was announced on April 18, 2011. The location test was held first on Akihabara on April 20, 2011. Umeda's location test started on April 22, 2011, and both ended on April 25, 2011. Fukuoka and Nagoya had their location test started from April 28, 2011 until May 1, 2011. Kyoto and Sapporo's location test started on May 6, 2011 until May 8, 2011. It was released on September 15, 2011.
Beatmania IIDX 21: Spada is a music video game and the 21st installment of Beatmania IIDX series of video games. The main motif of the game revolves around swords, as the title of the game, Spada is Italian for sword. The UI has a medieval fantasy theme and mainly features black, brown, and red colors. It was first announced on June 12, 2013. Location tests began in Akihabara on June 14, 2013 and ended on June 16, 2013. It was released on November 13, 2013.
Beatmania IIDX 22: Pendual is a music video game and the 22nd installment of Beatmania IIDX series of video game, a part of the long-running Bemani series. The theme of the game revolves around the concept of time with the theme split between the present and the future; Pendual itself is a portmanteau of "pendulum" and "dual". The UI mainly features white to symbolize the present and purple to symbolize the future. It was first announced during the BEMANI Namahōsō event on June 4, 2014, with location testing held from June 13 to 15, 2014. It was released on September 17, 2014.
Beatmania IIDX 23: Copula is the 23rd installment of the Beatmania IIDX series. The first location test was held at the Tokyo Lesiure Land #2 location in Akihabara, Japan from July 10 through 12th 2015. It was released on November 11, 2015. This is Last Beatmania Series made by Konami Digital Entertainment before Konami Amusement.
Dance Dance Revolution A20 is a music video game, the 17th installment of the Dance Dance Revolution arcade series in Japan, and the sequel to Dance Dance Revolution A. The game was released on new, golden cabinets on March 20, 2019 in Japan. A software upgrade for older cabinets for Japan and Asia was released on July 24, 2019, with South Korea receiving a localized release on August 1, 2019, and North America on September 24, 2019. A location test in Europe began on October 7, 2019, and ended on March 16, 2020.