Jammin' With Mario is a 2006 McDonald's browser game that was made as a part of the September 2006 Mario Happy Meal promotion. The game was supposedly a music game that taught the player how to play the Mario theme with their keyboard.
As of 2025, no gameplay or builds of the game have resurfaced online and no archives for the swf files are indexed on the Wayback Machine.
With Dance Factory you can create a choreographed routine for any CD in your collection. Using a spectral analysis system, the game will generate a step routine for each song that is average length. Dance Factory comes with five licensed tracks ranging from Tim MacGraw's "I Like It, I Love It" to the Pussycat Dolls tribute to home wreckers in "Don't Cha." The game comes with three dance difficulties such as easy, normal, and pro flavors, and the object is to hit the arrows on the dance mat at the correct time. As you hit the arrows, you will be informed if your step was bad timing, pretty good, or perfect. Increasing your accuracy unlocks bonus combos, and by filling the rank meter you can increase your score and change the animated visuals in the background.
Dance Factory includes five modes of play to entertain and exercise your body and brain. "Normal" mode has you dancing through one song while endurance mode challenges you to dance through an entire album. "Fitness" mode does not keep score, but counts calo
Australian Idol Sing is a single and multiplayer singing game. In real karaoke style, songs appear on your screen and you have to sing the right words at the right time. Onscreen indicators inform you what pitch you need to maintain at any given time. Hit the right notes for the right amount of time, and you'll get high scores.
A rhythm-action game like no other from the same team that created WarioWare. Rhythm Tengoku contains 48 minigames that put your rhythm to the test in a variety of crazy scenarios.
Rhythm Tengoku was developed by Nintendo R&D1 and released exclusively in Japan for the GBA in 2006 and in arcades with Sega's help in 2007. Being developed by the same studio responsible for the WarioWare games, Rhythm Tengoku mixes the mini-game based gameplay with rhythm game elements, featuring unusually high-quality music for a GBA game. The game started development in 2004. A 2002 prototype for a GBA drum sequencer was incorporated into Rhythm Tengoku as well: the player can freely drum within the Sound Test or take on 19 drum lessons. (Source)
The game contains eight stages with five rhythm games and one remix of the previous five each, adding up to 48 different mini-games total. Each game can be completed without hitting every note perfectly, although doing so will unlock various rhythm-related bonus games and modes, such as a
Mungyodance is the first game in the Mungyodance series. It is a rhythm game that features 167 songs, and has an overall simpler feel than the two succeeding games in the series.
SingStar Anthems is another helping from the popular karaoke game series SingStar. This time it's the turn of the Divas with tracks guaranteed to get the sequins and tiaras out. There are 20 tracks included with music videos plus the ability to disc-swap with previous SingStar games for extra songs.
In this strange music rhythm game, you play Gitaroo-Man as you go against various music themed villains. The game puts a new twist on music games as you not only have to time button presses but you have to move the analog stick around in a radar circle to follow a line that passes through the center point. You can play up to 4 players using the multitap and choose from a variety of characters, songs, and locales.
Along with local Ad-Hoc multiplayer and additional difficulty options, the game adds a new Duet mode, in which two players control Gitaroo Man and Kirah in two exclusive new stages, "Metal Header" and "Toda PasiĆ³n". These levels may also be played alone if the handheld's Ad-Hoc is activated.
SingStar Rocks! is a karaoke game, featuring hit rock songs. The game gives points which are distributed by the purity of singing, as in how well does one manage to stay on tune. It doesn't matter if you change octaves in the middle of the song or what words are you singing in (it doesn't have a word recognition), so your singing is rated by how well you manage to hit the correct note at the correct time.
Beatmania is the first version of the music video game beatmania IIDX to be released in the United States. It was released by Konami on March 28, 2006, for the PlayStation 2 video game console.
Get dancing with this fantastic party game for the whole family!
Pit your skills against your friends in an outright head-to-head versus match, or show of your moves online with Xbox Live.
Plenty of new mini games and challenges will keep the excitement going!
Allegro Rainbow's Piano Wizard is the music learning video game that painlessly teaches anyone to play the piano. It gives every player instant success and joy, because they will immediately be able to play their favorite songs! The game's patented sound and color learning cues transform tedious and repetitive practice sessions into an exciting and rewarding video game experience for people of all ages and musical abilities.
The Norwegian SingStar edition contains both material from the international edition and hits by Norwegian artists. Gameplay undergoes no major changes.