JamParty: Remixed enables anyone to become an instant producer, mix-master, and lead guitarist. Players can transition their mastery of traditional rhythm-based music games into actual player-controlled live music creation using JamParty: Remixed's gigantic library of chords, beats, vocals, and soundscapes.
Portable DX (Deluxe) comes 5 whole years and 6 Nintendo console releases after the release of the last PSP Taiko, Portable 2. The total number of initial songs is 70, and with the additional downloadable songs thereafter (like every Taiko PSP has done), it matches the massive songlists introduced on the Wii. Like the other recent games, the songlist has become a lot more geared towards Namco Originals.
Portable DX is also the first console Taiko to show the total number of drumrolls made in the song, and the second console Taiko game to introduce the all new Ura Oni difficulties. Other new mechanics in the game include organizing almost all unlockables in the game into an Achievement list, and a mode called Medley Mode, in which three, five, or eight different songs are put together and played all at once. Two new gameplay modifiers were also added into the game, which randomize the notes to different degrees. The Bell note has been removed from this release and the vestigial function of the analog stick is to pro
Wrap yourself up in the rich sound track: move your body to the rhythm and have fun with all the different choreographies available in the game. Let's Dance is the only party game where you dance on the TV: it’s just like being on a talent show! Choose from a wide variety of dance styles: pop, club, ‘80s disco, Latin, urban, not forgetting the classic party tracks.
Pokémon Say Tap? (Japanese: ポケモン言えTAP?) is a free mobile phone game for modern smartphones devices with iOS and Android, released promotionally in 2011. Its availability on the App Store and the Android Market was limited from July 15 to September 30 for the former, and August 11 to October 28 for the latter. It also has a Browser version subtitled For PC, which is indefinitely available on the Pokémon Daisuki Club.
The application is a rhythm-based game based on the Pokémon Trading Card Game. The goal is to tap Pokémon in rhythm to the music and sounds going on in the game. The song the application uses is the Japanese ending theme of the Pokémon anime at the time of the application's announcement, Can You Name All the Pokémon? BW.