Dance Dance Revolution Universe 2 | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Hudson Soft |
Publisher(s) | Konami |
Series | Dance Dance Revolution |
Platform(s) | Xbox 360 |
Release |
|
Genre(s) | Music, Exercise |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer |
Dance Dance Revolution Universe 2, sometimes abbreviated as Universe 2, is a music video game for the North American Xbox 360. Published by Konami and developed by Hudson Soft on December 4, 2007, [1] [2] [3] Universe 2 is a sequel to Dance Dance Revolution Universe released earlier the same year. Universe 2 features a large soundtrack with songs ranging from the 1970s to today, new modes of gameplay designed for newcomers including Freestyle Mode which allows players to dance without needing to step on any arrows, Quest Mode where players build a dancing character and travel from location to location in a virtual world facing off against other dancers, and downloadable content through the Xbox Live service. [1] The game was released in Europe with a different set of songs as Dancing Stage Universe 2.
Universe 2 Megapack:
Songs with a padlock next to them have to be unlocked after certain conditions are met in the game.
Dance Dance Revolution Universe 2 soundtrack [5] | ||
---|---|---|
No. | Song | Artist |
1 | "Apache" | The Incredible Bongo Band |
2 | "Dorset Perception" | Shpongle |
3 | "Fire" | Ferry Corsten |
4 | "He's the Greatest Dancer" | Sister Sledge |
5 | "I Know You Got Soul" | Jason Nevins vs. Eric B. & Rakim |
6 | "Is It Any Wonder? (Tall Paul Mix)" | Keane |
7 | "Jungle Boogie" | Kool & the Gang |
8 | "Love Don't Let Me Go" | David Guetta vs. The Egg |
9 | "Rockit" | Herbie Hancock |
10 | "Safety Dance" | Men Without Hats |
11 | "So Fine" | The Freestylers |
12 | "Take Me Out" | Franz Ferdinand |
13 | "The Way You Move (Full Phatt Remix)" | Outkast |
14 | "Walk Like an Egyptian" | The Bangles |
15 | "Always" | Amon Tobin |
16 | "Anytime Soon" | Blu Mar Ten |
17 | "Don't You Love Me" | Andy Caldwell |
18 | "Hey!" | Tipsy |
19 | "I Wish I Could Be Beautiful" | Rithma |
20 | "Love in Motion" | Alien Six |
21 | "Not Me (Extended Mix)" | Sarah Taylor |
22 | "Steppin' Out" | Kaskade |
23 | "Sunshine in London" | The Sunchasers feat. Victoria Pope |
24 | "The Tide" | Noisia |
25 | "Anthema" | oo39.com |
26 | "Arrivals and Departures" | Linus! |
27 | "Breathing More" | Larissa Lam |
28 | "Contract (Breach Mix)" | Rupesh Cartel |
29 | "Do It Right" | AFD feat. Ashley |
30 | "Eternus" | Sanxion7 |
31 | "Get Up! Give Up! Move On!" | The Divys |
32 | "Handle Your Business" | Starla Marie feat. Coco J |
33 | "In Different Things (USA Club Mix)" | ReName |
34 | "I Wanna Be Your Star (Speedy Mix)" | Melody & Mezzo |
35 | "Make Me Cry (Drew Campbell Remix)" | Binghi Ghost feat. Turbulence |
36 | "Moving Higher" | Contour |
37 | "Musika Atomika" | Syrian |
38 | "Orange Sky" | Arctures |
39 | "Ragganinja" | Greg Packer & Assassin |
40 | "Rock the Show" | Future Prophecy |
41 | "Space Space Shooter (Cusimo & Co. Remix)" | Kick & Punch |
42 | "Summer Girl" | Neverakka |
43 | "Synergy" | C-14 |
44 | "Tacticle" | Drew Campbell |
45 | "Until Forever" | Beatdrop |
46 | "Yoru Funk" | oo39.com |
47 | "Akiba Drift" | Ko Kimura |
48 | "Better Than Before" | Drew Campbell |
49 | "Breath the Air" | Bill Hamel with Spacebar |
50 | "Contra (Medley Mix)" | Nekojira |
51 | "Electrified" | SySF. |
52 | "Elfadiciell" | oo39.com |
53 | "Emi's Song" | Blu Mar Ten |
54 | "Entry of the Gladiators (Kaz Mix)" | Julius Fucik |
55 | "Higher Ground" | Togo Project feat. Chiyo Tia |
56 | "Lily Funk" | Konception |
57 | "Mochi Crunch" | Nekojira |
58 | "On Voit la Mer" | Togo Project feat. Tomoko Kataoka |
59 | "Rhythm is Rhythm" | oo39.com |
60 | "Somebody in da House" | Steve Porter |
61 | "Unborn" | Gein |
62 | "Cosmic Cowgirl" | Toshio Sakurai |
63 | "Dead End" | N&S |
64 | "Disable the Flaw" | D-Crew |
65 | "Let the Beat Hit 'Em (Classic R&B Style)" | Stone Bros. |
66 | "Matsuri (J-Summer Mix)" | Re-Venge |
67 | "Nemesis" | DJ Setup |
68 | "Potpourri D'orange" | Orange Lounge |
69 | "Senses" | JT.1Up |
70 | "Spin the Disc" | Good-Cool |
71 | "What is Love?" | Tomosuke |
Dancing Stage Universe 2 soundtrack [6] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Song | Artist | ||
"Atlantis to Interzone" | Klaxons | ||
"Galang" | M.I.A. | ||
"Here It Goes Again" | OK Go | ||
"Ooh La La" | Goldfrapp | ||
"Young Folks" | Peter, Bjorn and John | ||
"It's The Beat" | Simian Mobile Disco | ||
"Noise Won't Stop" | Shy Child | ||
"You Gonna Want Me" | Tiga | ||
"Chicken Payback" | The Bees | ||
"Heartbeats" | The Knife | ||
"Golden Dawn" | South Central |
Dance Dance Revolution (DDR) 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.
The Konami Code, also commonly referred to as the Contra Code and sometimes the 30 Lives code, is a cheat code that appears in many Konami video games, as well as some non-Konami games. In the original code, the player has to press the following sequence of buttons on the game controller to enable a cheat or other effects:
Dancing Stage is a series of music video games developed and published by Konami. It is a spin-off of Dance Dance Revolution for the European market as well as a few Japanese titles. Games were released for arcade, PlayStation, PlayStation 2 and Wii.
The EyeToy is a color webcam for use with the PlayStation 2. Supported games use computer vision and gesture recognition to process images taken by the EyeToy. This allows players to interact with the games using motion, color detection, and also sound, through its built-in microphone. It was released in 2003.
Karaoke Revolution and its sequels are video games for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, GameCube, Wii, Xbox, and Xbox 360, developed by Harmonix and Blitz Games and published by Konami in its Bemani line of music games. The Original Concept for Karaoke Revolution was created by Scott Hawkins and Sneaky Rabbit Studios. Technology and concepts from the game were subsequently incorporated into Harmonix's game Rock Band.
Dance Dance Revolution ULTRAMIX 3 is a Music video game developed by Konami and the tenth entry of Dance Dance Revolution released in the United States. It was released on November 15, 2005 for the Xbox. About 70 songs are available in total in this version. The game was announced in a press release by Konami on May 17, 2005, and unveiled at the E³ expo in Los Angeles that same day.
Dance Dance Revolution SuperNova, released in Europe as Dancing Stage SuperNova, is an arcade and PlayStation 2 game in the Dance Dance Revolution (DDR) series of music video games. It was produced by Konami and released through Betson Enterprises. The game was released in Europe on April 28, 2006, followed shortly by a North American release on May 15 and a Japanese release on July 12.
Dance Dance Revolution Universe is a music video game. It was released as a part of Dance Dance Revolution franchise by Konami for the Xbox 360. The game was unveiled on May 9, 2006 at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in Los Angeles.
Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party, known as Dancing Stage Hottest Party in the European and Oceanic regions, is a video game released by Konami in 2007 and 2008 to several countries for the Wii console. Konami took the game beyond the traditional setup of Dance Dance Revolution by incorporating the Wii Remote and the standard dance pad into a full body motion game. It has two sequels, Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party 2 and Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party 3.
Rock Revolution is a music video game developed by Zoë Mode and HB Studios and published by Konami. The game was released on 15 October 2008 for the Nintendo DS, PlayStation 3, Wii and Xbox 360. As with similar titles, the game uses various controllers to simulate the performance of rock music, primarily using guitar and drum controllers on its Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 versions.
Dance Dance Revolution X is a music video game developed by Konami. A part of the Dance Dance Revolution series, it was announced in 2008 for Japan and on May 15, 2008 for the North American PlayStation 2. The arcade version was announced on July 7, 2008, July 9, 2008 in Europe, and July 10, 2008 for North America. Released to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Dance Dance Revolution, DDR X sports an improved interface, new music, and new modes of play. The arcade release featured an overhauled cabinet design with a widescreen display, e-Amusement and USB access, and an improved sound system. Despite such new design of its arcade cabinet, upgrade kit to change the edition of DDR on its first generation arcade cabinet from SuperNOVA2 to X is also available. The PlayStation 2 release has link ability with the arcade machine, multi-player support over LAN, and other improved and returning features such as EyeToy support. DDR X was called a "truly global version", with a multi-regional release by all three major Konami houses.
Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party 2, later released as Dance Dance Revolution Furu Furu Party in Japan, was announced by Konami on May 15, 2008 as part of the 10th anniversary of Dance Dance Revolution celebration. Hottest Party 2 features the same gameplay as the first Hottest Party and introduces new gameplay modes, gimmicks, characters and graphical enhancements. The game also features an all-new soundtrack featuring licensed music from the past four decades as well as new Konami Originals. Hottest Party 2 was released on September 16, 2008 in North America. A teaser site for the Japanese release was launched on December 9, 2008 featuring new gameplay footage from the game.
Dance Dance Revolution Universe 3, sometimes abbreviated as DDR Universe 3, is a video game for Xbox 360. It was announced by Konami on May 15, 2008, and released on October 21, 2008. The game has new songs, a story mode, the ability to create custom songs and custom character creation.
See also Dance Dance Revolution
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.
Dance Dance Revolution X2 is a music video game released by Konami for the North American PlayStation 2. It is the direct sequel to the North American PlayStation 2 release of Dance Dance Revolution X. Released on October 27, 2009 alongside Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party 3, DDR X2 was one of the first Dance Dance Revolution games released to use songs from the 2009-10 soundtrack. It contains a unique soundtrack, a new master mode, additional modes of play and minor changes and refinements but is otherwise unchanged from its global predecessor Dance Dance Revolution X. It was the final DDR game released for the PlayStation 2.
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.
Dance Dance Revolution II, later released in Europe as Dance Dance Revolution Hottest Party 5, is a music video game in the Dance Dance Revolution series by Konami. It was released on October 11, 2011 for the Nintendo Wii in North America and on November 24, 2011 in Europe. Dance Dance Revolution II is the direct sequel to Dance Dance Revolution for the Wii. This game shares songs with the arcade version of Dance Dance Revolution X3 vs 2ndMix. It features characters from the arcade versions of Dance Dance Revolution. It was the final DDR game release for the Nintendo Wii and is the latest in the series to be released for a home console as of 2022.
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.