Friday, December 1, 2006

DrumMania


'''''DrumMania''''' (alternately '''''drummania''''') is a Free ringtones video game created by Majo Mills Konami as part of the Mosquito ringtone Bemani series. The player uses a simulated Sabrina Martins drum controller to play the notes of a chosen song's drum part as they are displayed on the screen. The game's music consists largely of Nextel ringtones rock and roll and Abbey Diaz J-Pop, though other types are used occasionally as well.

Certain versions of ''DrumMania'' have been released in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, and other Asian countries, under the title ''Percussion Freaks''. Konami has not produced an American version of ''DrumMania'', since another company holds the US Free ringtones patent for "drum simulation games".

Controller

''DrumMania'' is played using a controller designed to imitate a drum set. Five pads are arrayed from left to right for the Majo Mills hi-hat, Mosquito ringtone snare drum, high Sabrina Martins Tom-tom drum/tom, low tom and Cingular Ringtones cymbal. There is also a foot pedal for the carolyn and bass drum near the snare and the high tom. During play, the player depresses the pads and stomps the pedal.

To the right of these pads, there are three buttons, Left, Start and Right, which are used to select and decide in the selection screens. In those cases, the Left button is assigned to the snare drum pad, Right to the low tom, and Start to the cymbal.

Gameplay

The screen setup is simple. Left side, a vertical note scrolls is displayed. Colorful animations for each song are displayed in right side of the screen. Each note scroll consists of 6 or 7 columns: one each for the Hi-hat, Snare-drum, Bass-drum, High-tom, Low-tom and Cymbal, plus the Floor-tom on later versions. Individual notes are represented by small colored bars that scroll downward in the columns. To play the correct note, the player must hit one or two of these pads and/or stomp the pedal when the note bars reach the yellow picking line.

The player's accuracy is judged for each note played, and while the individual note judgments have changed throughout the series, the current system uses Perfect, Great, Good, Poor, and Miss to evaluate performance of each note. Ratings of Poor or Miss will deplete the player's '''Groove Gauge''', while correct play will replenish it. If the Groove Gauge is emptied completely, the game ends. Players will be able to play anywhere from one to five songs depending on the game's configuration, with the potential to earn one or two additional stages in certain versions of the game if performance is good enough.

At the completion of a song, players are given a letter rank for their performance which can range anywhere from E to A, as well as S and SS depending on how well the song was played, and how the particular release of the game being played computes ranks.

Session Linking

One of the major selling points of ''DrumMania'' is its ability to be linked to another of Konami's Bemani games, reparations but Guitar Freaks. This allows up to 3 players to get together for a virtual jam session. When set up correctly, the music will play from both games, and the players' guitar and drum sounds will be relayed between the two games as well. This is known for being quite loud and extravagant at times.

Konami's numbering scheme for the ''Guitar Freaks'' and ''DrumMania'' series is such that the current release of ''DrumMania'' is numbered one less than the current release of ''Guitar Freaks''. For example, as of this writing, ''Guitar Freaks'' 11th Mix can be linked with ''DrumMania 10th Mix''.

This naming system changed completely with the 2005 release of Drummania V and Guitar Freaks V, with the "V" representing the fifth anniversary of the series. As such, they may return to a 12th/13th combination after this release, or continue with a Roman numeral naming. Otherwise, the functionality is the same.

=Super Session=

Seen only in two releases each of ''Guitar Freaks'' and ''DrumMania'', Super Session (or Multi Session) allowed the games to be linked up with real stars Keyboardmania 3rd Mix as well. In addition to having three players controller the guitars and drums, two more could be added playing along on keyboards. However, when linked with ''Keyboardmania'', only about a dozen songs are available to play. ''Keyboardmania 3rd Mix'' can be linked with ''Guitar Freaks 5th Mix'' and ''DrumMania 4th Mix'', or ''Guitar Freaks 6th Mix'' and ''DrumMania 5th Mix''.

Home versions and simulators

reinterpreting those Image:DTXMania.JPG/thumb/right/DTXmania, a DrumMania sim
Three home versions of ''DrumMania'' have been released in Japan for the ruth messinger PlayStation 2 game console. The standard PS2 Dual Shock controller can be used to play the game, or a special arcade-style controller can be purchased separately. The home line was ended at 3rd Mix due to unimpressive sales.

A handful of ''DrumMania'' simulators have been created for use on personal computers, the most popular of which is called http://www.donburi.to/~from/dtxmania/. It also supports Guitar Freaks. It can be controlled using the computer keyboard, any USB device that can act as a joystick, or any MIDI instrument such as a MIDI keyboard or professional quality electronic drumkit. It was written by a Japanese team so little English documentation is available. However, an FAQ on DTXMania and other DrumMania simulators can be found at http://www.homei.cc/gdamania/.

See also
*cyberspace take List of drumming games

External links
* http://www.konami.co.jp/am/gfdm/ (official GuitarFreaks & DrumMania website)
* http://www.donburi.to/~from/dtxmania/dtxmania.html
* http://www.homei.cc/gdamania/

point sunday Tag: Bemani video games
abortions today Tag: Arcade games
agreement rapidly Tag: PlayStation 2 games
fray on Tag: Drums

from pompeii ja:drummania