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  • In 2002, at the DisneyQuest five-story arcade facility in Disney World, I played DDR for

  • the first time. Holy hell, did I suck. So I quickly retreated to the safety of the fighting-game

  • wing, to throw down on Street Fighter II, Marvel Vs. Capcom, hell, they even had an

  • EHRGEIZ machine. But between that point and about 2007, I experienced pretty much every

  • flavor of DDR known to man, from 3rd Mix Korean to Oha Star to, yes, even Disney Mix. Konami

  • spread DDR - and the whole Bemani concept, for that matter - onto every property and

  • platform they could manage, including handhelds that really, really had no business playing

  • games like this. But lo, here it is, direct from Felicity in Worcestershire whose ability

  • to obtain absurdities knows no bounds: the GAME BOY COLOR version of Dance Dance Revolution:

  • Disney Mix. May Altana have mercy on our souls.

  • Yep, youve got a black background, a bunch of arrows, an 8-bit rendition of Electrical

  • Parade, and assorted Disney mascots shakinit awkwardly over to the side. Sounds like

  • a recipe for disaster, doesn�t it? Especially since, y�know, you can�t actually DANCE,

  • as per the title? It�s Thumb Thumb revolution, if anything, And then, since you can�t readily

  • break your D-pad in half, youve gotta bifurcate your inputs onto two rather non-intuitive

  • hands, with right-steps on the A-button, up-steps on the B, and the D-pad for left and down.

  • At least, that�s how I managed to brain it out. Once you get into the hang of it,

  • you might just recognize some of these turns and spins and jumps, and eventually come to

  • the realization that these stepcharts are EXACT copies of the PS1 version, just with

  • no scroll speed options, everything�s flat (in that beat position isn�t indicated in

  • arrow color, as in most DDR games), and the music has been 8-bit-ified. Ever wonder what

  • an 8-bit cut of Night of Fire sounds like? Here ya go, Jim.

  • There are even some extras, like your gameplay unlocking accessories for Minnie�s wardrobe

  • here, which then can be combined to unlock new songs like Supercalifr... Super... that

  • really long name from Mary Poppins. There�s also a one-miss-and-youre-out challenge

  • course, kind of an Oni mode on steroids, which is made ridiculously difficult by the lag

  • inherent in this recording system. I realize there�s a lot of DDR we didn�t get here

  • in the States, and I realize there�s a good reason for a lot of that. A portable version

  • of a strange arcade phenomenon, as arcades were quickly leaving the public consciousness

  • and portables were allOMG POKEMONat the time, wouldn�t have caught on. But playing

  • this... thing... makes me appreciate the effort that went into making a playable - and actually

  • kinda fun - interpretation of honest-to-goodness Dance Dance Revolution on the freakinGame

  • Boy Color. My instincts told me this would be a train wreck, when in fact it�s just...

  • as good as a GBC DDR could be. Heck, they even packed in a few of Disney Mix�s non-Disney

  • tracks into the fifteen songs included, like Let�s Groove, and Mr. Bassman, and... the

  • Macarena. You have been warned.

In 2002, at the DisneyQuest five-story arcade facility in Disney World, I played DDR for

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