20 Rhythm Games Everyone Should Play at Least Once


20 Rhythm Games Everyone Should Play at Least Once

© Rock Band 4 gameplay screenshot

Dance Dance Revolution (Series)

© Dance Dance Revolution gameplay screenshot

Elite Beat Agents

© Elite Beat Agents key art

Patapon

© Patapon gameplay screenshot

Gitaroo Man

© Gitaroo Man gameplay screenshot

Rhythm Doctor

© Rhythm Doctor gameplay screenshot

A Dance of Fire and Ice

© A Dance of Fire and Ice gameplay screenshot

Muse Dash

© Muse Dash gameplay screenshot

Trombone Champ

© Trombone Champ gameplay screenshot

Metal: Hellsinger

© Metal: Hellsinger gameplay screenshot

Rhythm Heaven

©

Crypt of the Necrodancer

© Crypt of the Necrodancer gameplay screenshot

Thumper

© Thumper gameplay screenshot

Beat Saber

© Beat Saber gameplay screenshot

Theatrhythm: Final Bar Line

© Theatrhythm Final Bar Line key art

Hi-Fi Rush

© Hi-Fi Rush gameplay screenshot

Sayonara Wild Hearts

© Sayonara Wild Hearts gameplay screenshot

Rez

© Rez gameplay screenshot

Rock Band (Series)

© Rock Band 2 gameplay screenshot

PaRappa the Rapper

© PaRappa the Rapper gameplay screenshot

Guitar Hero (Series)

© Guitar Hero II game and peripheral

20 Rhythm Games Everyone Should Play at Least Once

Long, long ago, well before the Internet became ubiquitous and print media was all but dead, gamers used to buy video game magazines. One of the best of the bunch was the Official US PlayStation Magazine. Aside from its exclusive coverage of upcoming PlayStation titles, the Official US PlayStation Magazine‘s greatest selling point was its monthly demo disc. The very first issue of the magazine, the October 1997 edition, came packaged with a demo disc featuring an assortment of games, but one would end up standing out above the rest. This game was none other than a little title from Japanese developer NanaOn-Sha and Sony itself known as PaRappa the Rapper. We might not have realized it at the time, but those of us who played and found ourselves hooked on that demo were witnessing the birth of modern rhythm games.

The undeniable charm and infectious music of PaRappa the Rapper would give way to a flood of other games utilizing music and rhythm as core components of their gameplay. Of course, rhythm games were already majorly popular in Japanese arcades thanks to games like Beatmania, but the widespread success and acclaim of PaRappa the Rapper signaled loud and clear that rhythm games could have cross-cultural appeal. Just two years later, Konami would blow the doors off the rhythm game scene with what’s arguably the first rhythm game to become a cultural phenomenon: Dance Dance Revolution. And while the genre continues to evolve and branch out into several other genres (including first-person shooters and dungeon-crawling RPGs), Dance Dance Revolution set the stage for a slew of rhythm games immersing players through specialized plastic peripherals.

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