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However, 20 new licenses are absent in that version of the game for the same reason. In Dance Dance Revolution A20 Plus, 22 licenses (20 from Dance Dance Revolution A, 回レ!雪月花 from Dance Dance Revolution (2013), and only my railgun from Dance Dance Revolution X2) were removed. Songs marked in gold are exclusive for golden cabinets.
Dance Dance Revolution (ダンスダンスレボリューション, Dansu Dansu Reboryūshon) (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.
The music of Dance Dance Revolution is the collective soundtracks of the initial Dance Dance Revolution game in Konami's music simulation series. The soundtracks rely heavily on licensed music from Toshiba EMI's Dancemania series and also contain original songs produced by Konami's in-house artist Naoki Maeda. The original arcade game contains ...
The arcade release of Dance Dance Revolution Extreme contains 80 new songs of 240 total, including 11 Club Version songs and three Dancing Stage EuroMix 2 songs. Most of the other new songs are revivals from previous Bemani games.
The original soundtrack for Dance Dance Revolution X was released in Japan on January 29, 2009, coinciding with the release of the PlayStation 2 version of X. The soundtrack consists of 3 CDs, which feature the songs from the game, songs from the Wii release Full Full Party (the Japanese version of Hottest Party 2 ) and a nonstop megamix disc.
The music of Dance Dance Revolution SuperNova is composed largely of Konami Originals, in-house music written and performed by Konami staff, including older songs carried over from Dance Dance Revolution Extreme and new songs introduced in the SuperNova series. It also contains several licensed tracks.
The music of Dance Dance Revolution is mostly North American pop and rock hits from past and present. In addition, new and returning Konami Original songs by in-house musicians such as Naoki Maeda are also to be included in the game.
Note the numbers given for each difficulty level are similar to DDR's 1-10 "footers", except In The Groove removed the "footer" label and added 3 additional difficulty levels, which aim to have harder stepcharts than the hardest 10-footer songs in DDR. Therefore, a 10-footer in ITG is comparable to a 10-footer in DDR.