

If you have a DS, buy it for an amazingly low price. Which is just what I award this game with. \\\\\\\"Try again\\\\\\\" means you are a miserable failure, \\\\\\\"okay\\\\\\\" means you were decent enough to pass, while \\\\\\\"superb\\\\\\\" means you\\\\\\\'re awesome and get a shiny gold medal. And, on one particular level, you can get your timing one tenth of a second wrong and watch in horror as your little character performs the wrong move, mucking up your \\\\\\\"superb\\\\\\\" ranking. The DS won\\\\\\\'t necessarily register what you\\\\\\\'re doing properly unless you hold your stylus hand in an annoyingly uncomfortable position. Speaking of the controls, they are the only downside to this masterpiece. The music never sounds unfitting, and the controls always match the stage you\\\\\\\'re playing. And it\\\\\\\'s been developed incredibly well. It\\\\\\\'s even crazier than it sounds, matching Lewis Carrol\\\\\\\'s Alice in Wonderland duo in outrageous insanity. Tap, press, and flick your stylus to the beat of a brilliant tune. There\\\\\\\'s 50 different minigames, most of them with a completely different theme to the last, but they all share the same gameplay.

It\\\\\\\'s a game about playing soccer (football in Europe) in space, joining an army of birds, and even joining a choir of cutesy bow-tie midgets. Well, Rhythm Heaven, Rhythm Tengoku Gold in Japan, is all that, and much, much more. The banner's texture was dummied out in international versions.Have you ever played a game about lizards with musical instruments on their back? No? Then what about a game featuring monkeys at a pop music Have you ever played a game about lizards with musical instruments on their back? No? Then what about a game featuring monkeys at a pop music concert? You haven\\\\\\\'t? Perhaps you\\\\\\\'ve tried a game about using karate to fling dumplings into your mouth? Oh. The player uses the stylus in different ways on the screen stylus strokes are evaluated and scored. In the practice room of Tangotronic 3000, there is a banner hanging just above the camera that reads "目指せ!2位!", which roughly translates to "Aim for second place!" Due to the fact that the camera does not move during the practice, this banner, as well as the entire room, go unseen. Rhythm Paradise Megamix is a rhythm game for Nintendo DS, which compiles the best mini-games in the series and features 30 exclusive mini-games. Unused Models Tangotronic Offscreen Banner These songs are inside BCGRP files, but music is usually stored in. Under " sound/group", there are empty files labelled " GROUP_WSD_O_FEN_AR.bcgrp" (Built to Scale 2 Wii) and " GROUP_WSD_KANTORING_SHORT" (a prequel for Flockstep). Interestingly, there are empty files that would contain the practice themes for Karate Man Returns, The Snappy Trio, and Shoot-'em-up 2 present in the files.

There's also another file labeled "GROUP_WSD_TUTORIAL_NTR_ROBOT" which is empty. It shares the filename with the practice theme for Fillbots 1 (GROUP_WSD_TUTORIAL_NTR_ROBBOT_SHORT) except spelled correctly.
