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[[File:mendes-blackanother_5248.png|frame|The over 2000 notes in under 2 minutes. That's beatmania IIDX, [[Gratuitous English|It's too cool!]] ]]
''beatmania'' is a popular [[Rhythm Game]] developed by [[Konami]]. Considered by many to be one of the forerunners of the modern music game. Of course when they realized how popular the arcade version was, Konami would milk the genre for all its worth with spin-offs (involving [[Dance Dance Revolution|dance]],
The basic game is simple, players are armed with a 5-key piano-styled keyboard and turntable, and must press keys or scratch the turntable when notes cascade down the screen corresponding to them. This fills up a Groove Gauge; if the gauge finishes above a certain threshold, you pass, it's just that simple. While the game's core is simple enough, things can get [[Nintendo Hard|real idiotic, real fast]].
There have been three major incarnations of the game:
* ''beatmania'' (or [[Fan Nickname|"5-key"]] beatmania), the original series. First released in 1996, lasting with new versions until "[[Exactly What It Says
* ''beatmania IIDX'', first released in 1999 as a spin-off, but becoming the primary series in 2002. Kept the same basic gameplay, but added two additional keys to the control array (for a total of 7), a fancier cabinet (with more lights, more effectors, a widescreen monitor, turntables on opposite ends, an LED marquee, and a bass platform), and a difficulty curve that [[Sequel Difficulty Spike|keeps on getting worse every year.]] What'd you expect when the ''20th version'' is on its way very soon?
* ''beatmania III'', a failed [[Video Game Remake|remake of the 5-key series using more modern hardware]], with higher quality graphics and sound, more effectors, more speakers, effector pedals (which could also be used in special charts), save data on floppy disks, and more. It didn't last long, however, only a few years.
The series is still popular in Japan, but has seen the shores of the United States only once, unfortunately, and shows no signs of another U.S. release.
Not to be confused with [[The Beatles (band)|''Beatle''mania]].
{{tropelist}}
* [[Akashic Records]]: The "genre" for the song Almagest. It makes some sense, given the the title of the song, but still...
* [[The Artifact]]: Remember back in the day? When this game actually ''did'' primarily have hip-hop, and as such an actual justification for having scratching in its controls? Yet, it remains, even though most of the songs are now either hardcore electronica or pop. The ''IIDX'' series ''did'' start with mostly J-pop and R&B, but then began to diversify, to the point where on most songs, the turntable is just another trigger for sounds that aren't scratching.▼
* [[Artifact Title]]: Inverted for IIDX: the game was originally produced in two different styles of arcade cabinets, the now rare "standard" cabinet, and a "deluxe" cabinet. On the standard cabinet, the game was known as "beatmania II", but the Deluxe cabinets carried the title "beatmania IIDX" on its artwork and software instead. Later on, the standard cabinet was discontinued, leaving only the deluxe one. At this point, "beatmania IIDX" became the official name of the series▼
** That hasn't stopped songs with legitimate scratching from showing up in the modern era though. The OMES on Resort Anthem had gratuitous scratching as its main gimmick.▼
▲* [[Artifact Title]]: Inverted for IIDX: the game was originally produced in two different styles of arcade cabinets, the now rare "standard" cabinet, and a "deluxe" cabinet. On the standard cabinet, the game was known as
* [[Ascended Glitch]]: The song "GAMBOL" was notorious for an infamous bug that gave it [[Hitbox Dissonance|unusually small timing windows]]. It was fixed for the arcade version of Happy Sky (with a fixed version on the Normal difficulty, and the glitched version on the Hyper difficulty). But, when the song was revived on the home version of RED, Konami decided to troll players by adding a new [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=giiNrvgclX4 Another] chart ... which was simply the Hyper chart with even ''stricter'' timing. It gets worse on the home versions of DJ Troopers and Empress, where hidden codes (spelling out "G-J-H" or "G-J-A" by scrolling to songs starting with those letters, and pressing Select on each one) lets the player use those timing windows on ''any'' song.
* [[Ascended Meme]]: Some ''Beatmania'' DJs themselves use the term "Nidera (弐寺)" instead of Two-D-X when talking about the ''IIDX'' series, and Ryu☆ described himself in the [http://www.konami.jp/bemani/popn/music17/mc/song14/handz..html comments] for ''Second Heaven'' as "That 'Somebody Scream!'guy" as a result of [[Misheard Lyrics]].
* [[Audio Adaptation]]: The <nowiki>ROOTS26S[uite]</nowiki> drama CDs centered around the DJ characters.
* [[Bonus Boss]]: Beginning on Distorted, versions have featured new extra stage systems integrating with e-Amusement, where meeting certain conditions in-game unlocks additional boss songs in a themed area; usually only accessible on the Extra Stage, and always under themed aliases. Beating all the songs in the area will either lead to the [[True Final Boss]] as the One More Extra Stage
** On Resort Anthem, this changed a bit. There were still bonus bosses, but instead of an Extra Stage system, there was an event called the World Tour, where earning "dellar points" in-game could be used to unlock various things. Fittingly, the harder unlocks were hidden in the World Tour.
** Lincle returns to the previous style, the first three bosses involve playing sets with the EX-HARD modifier that are either of the same genre, from the same version, or by the same artist.
* [[Boss in Mook Clothing]]: In Resort Anthem, the song "灼熱Beach-Side Bunny" strangely inverts and then subverts this. While it's the One More Extra Stage song, if one listens to it without knowing that, they'd hear... [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=attbUNnY5-8 this
** Go all the way back to ''10th Style'', and you'll find the boss song "One More Lovely", it sounds like it came straight out of a
* [[Boss Rush]]: Since the implementation of the
* [[Bullet Hell]]: It almost feels like that sometimes
** Parodied in the [[Retraux]] song "Tranoid", whose video involves an arcade game consisting of Tran dodging notes directly from its Normal-mode chart.
* [[Corner of Woe]]: Anyone who gets a 78% on a song, 2% below the required gauge to clear it.
* [[Department of Redundancy Department]]: "Spring Rain (lluvia de primavera)", when translated is "Spring Rain (Spring Rain)".
** Or better yet, SUPER STAR 満-MITSURU-
* [[Difficulty Spike]]: Many of the more difficult songs will end with the gameplay equivalent of a [[Last-Note Nightmare]].
* [[Distracted
** Some people consider Dai, a dancer who [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kwv_vPIL4IQ always] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_p_qs3P6nSw appears] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gvARFJPd9GA on HHH songs] a lot more distracting
***
* [[Exactly What It Says
* [[Fake Difficulty]]: You need your life meter to be at 80% or above at the end of a song to pass. Guess how the people who make the notecharts fake the difficulty.
** As another more egregious example, the song "GAMBOL".
** Sirius has hold notes and a related note for the turntable where you have to continuously spin it one direction for the duration of the hold note and then snap it back the other way at the very end of the note. Fittingly, [[True Final Boss]] "Almagest" used them a lot.
* [[Fan Service]]: Getting good grades on songs will also put different character art backgrounds on the result screen. Some of this may indeed qualify. No wonder the console versions have gallery modes.
* [[Fetish Fuel]]: The three ''IIDX'' girls, among other things.
* [[The Four Gods]]: Cardinal Gate, the [[Perfect Run Final Boss|Extra Stages]] from DistorteD (''IIDX 13'').
** To be specific, the names of the four gods are aliases of popular Bemani artists. They are, as follows...
*** Byakko = {{spoiler|Tatsuya Shimizu
*** Suzaku = {{spoiler|Yoshitaka Nishimura
*** Genbu = {{spoiler|Jun Wakita
*** Seiryu = {{spoiler|Ryutaro Nakahara
*** Finally, there's a new 5th god known as Kinjishi, which means a combination of all 4 beasts. {{spoiler|It's Takayuki Ishikawa
*** Only Suzaku, Seiryu and Genbu have reappeared in further installments so far.
* [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]]: ''5PM ETERNAL'''s [http://vjarmy.com/wiki/index.php/5PM_ETERNAL#Lyrics lyrics], my god.
** For "Schlagwerk", they [[Precision F-Strike|didn't even have to try
* [[Gratuitous English]]: Many songs in English have this.
** Most of the English text in promotional materials or in-game also ends up like this. And don't even ''forget'' about that infamous "GXPERT" typo from RED.
** Songs sung or rapped by Paula Terry, Aaron G
*** And we can't forget about Michael [[Misheard Lyrics|in a boat]], now can we? In reality, he was played by an American, Michael Stillwind (from Konami's Hawaii studio), and voiced by DJ Yoshitaka. Stillwind was notably responsible for his work on the ''[[Dance Dance Revolution]]'' Ultramix and Universe games, and for getting DM Ashura (who won a contest to get onto Universe 2, and then made some later contributions for Universe 3, which later crossed onto X2) a spot on
* [[Harder Than Hard]]:
*
*** Black Anothers are slightly [[Older Than They Think]]. The final two stages in Gold CS's Kaiden course, Vanessa and Kamaitachi, have special charts then exclusive to that course. When/
*** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbZqezK48ro&feature=related Here's a video of Mendes played on piano].
** Oh and then there's the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xR7jIk3wZ84 Doubles Black Another version] at 2603 notes.
** Mendes Black Another has been FC'd on a Dual Shock controller
** Lincle adds a new modifier, EX-HARD. A variation of the HARD modifier, (which makes the Groove Gauge take more damage for poorly timed hits, but removes the 80% requirement), a single miss reduces it by ''18% at once''. If this isn't literally Harder than Hard, we don't know what is.
* [[Idiosyncratic Difficulty Levels]]: Formally Light 7, 7 Keys, and Another. Happy Sky adjusted the ranking scale and re-named the first two to Normal and Hyper.
** When it was first introduced, Another was actually [[Exactly What It Says
* [[Kyu and Dan Ranks]]: Dan'inintei mode
* [[Last-Note Nightmare]]: Due to how the lifebar works across the series (it must be at or above 80% by the end of the song to pass), a song with a ridiculous ending is practically a series trope on its own.
* [[Loads and Loads of Characters]]: Some videos outright show this.
* [[Marathon Level]]: Scripted Connection⇒ & Shade, both lasting about 6 minutes long. Both by the same artist to boot. You see, the part of the song you actually play is dependent on the difficulty, and the soundtracks have the full version as all three versions strung together. However, on the console version of Happy Sky (and beginning on Gold AC), all three versions of Scripted Connection have full sets of charts (the N-mix, H-mix, and A-mix respectively). The "long mix" of Scripted Connection is also a hidden track on Happy Sky CS, where it clocks in as the longest single song in the entire series.
** ''IIDX'' Resort Anthem's extra stage
* [[Mini Game Credits]]: DistorteD's credits roll lets the player spin around the camera angle on the monotonous 3D backdrop soaring through the background with the turntable, it's not a "game" per say, but still.
** Subverted by
** The subversion is averted for "Vermillion" (Sirius ending theme, debuting on Resort anthem) and "The Last Striker" (DJ Troopers ending theme, debuting on the [[
* [[Mission Pack Sequel]] ''IIDX'' has about 19 installments to its name, each with different art/song themes. Not exactly [[Capcom Sequel Stagnation]] though, since every mix has new songs, new features, and often remove or bring back older songs,
* [[Nintendo Hard]]: ''IIDX'' is regarded by many [[Rhythm Game]] conoisseurs as one of the most hardcore rhythm games in existence, if not ''the'' most hardcore.
▲* [[Nintendo Hard]]: ''IIDX'' is regarded by many [[Rhythm Game]] conoisseurs as one of the most hardcore rhythm games in existence, if not ''the'' most hardcore.
** The groove meter 80% passing grade for all songs greatly contributes to this.
* [[No Fair Cheating]]: Scores achieved with the "Auto-Scratch" modifier don't get saved. In ''IIDX'', this applies to the "5 keys" modifier as well. With the introduction of continuous notes in ''IIDX 17'', the Legacy Note modifier which removes these has the same effect. Clearing a song with any of these won't save the score, but it is marked as an "[[Easy Mode Mockery|Assist Clear]]". This backfires on people who use the 5key modifier on classic ''Beatmania'' songs. Using the modifier on them will load up the old 5key chart from beatmaina, but will still count it as an Assist Clear.▼
* [[No Pronunciation Guide]]: The song "AA
▲* [[No Fair Cheating]]: Scores achieved with the "Auto-Scratch" modifier don't get saved. In ''IIDX'', this applies to the "5 keys" modifier as well. With the introduction of continuous notes in IIDX 17, the Legacy Note modifier which removes these has the same effect. Clearing a song with any of these won't save the score, but it is marked as an "[[Easy Mode Mockery|Assist Clear]]".
▲* [[No Pronunciation Guide]]: The song "AA." [[Word of God]] has confirmed that ''there is no official pronunciation.''
* [[Ominous Latin Chanting]]: Xepher, and perhaps ''any'' Zektbach song actually.
* [[One-Hit-Point Wonder]]: Hazard Mode in
* [[Perfect Run Final Boss]]: One More Extra Stages.
* [[Public Domain Soundtrack]]: Not rampant, but many classics in the series ("V" and "Kakumei" especially) are indeed remixes of other classical pieces ("The Four Seasons: Winter" and the "Revolutionary Etude", respectively).
* [[Rage Quit]]: Seeing "78%" (2% lower than the required gauge to pass the song) tends to cause this.
* [[Rank Inflation]]: Grades go from F to AAA. Similarly, in Class mode, you have the 7th through 1st ''kyu'' grades, then 1st through 10th ''dan'', and finally, ''kaiden''.
* [[Recurring Riff]]: Every Suzaku song has a distorted guitar screech in it, appropriately dubbed by many fans as the ''[[Memetic Mutation|Suzaku Scream]]''. All Dj MASS Mad Izm* songs have a ''lot'' of scratching in them, and his boss song for Resort Anthem takes it up to eleven. You thought the Turntable was [[The Artifact]]? Think again!
* [[Recycled Soundtrack]]: Songs will often be continually "revived" (remaining alongside new songs on a newer version of the game, or appearing alongside older songs on console versions) quite a few versions, especially if they're fan favorites.
** "V" is notorious for this. It debuted on ''5th Style'', and got revived on almost ''every'' console version after that until ''IIDX 1''). Fans suspected Konami of "ruining [[Memetic Mutation|the joke]]" that [[You Put the X In XY|"you can't spell 'revival' without 'V'"]].
** Then,
* [[Red Zone Remix Vid]]: Trope creator.
* [[Required Spinoff Crossover]]: Throughout practically every Bemani game actually, songs will often cross over from ''Beatmania'' to other games, or vice versa. Special mention goes to Kakumei, a collaboration between dj TAKA and Naoki (who were both the producers for their respective franchises at the time), which appeared as the One More Extra Stage on both ''IIDX 7th Style'' and ''[[Dance Dance Revolution|DDRMAX2]]'', both of which were the 7th main release in their respective series. At the same time, a version of "MAX 300" (which was the Extra Stage song on ''DDRMAX'', a first for the series) was also the main Extra Stage on ''7th Style'', it too being the first Extra Stage in the series.
** And then you had that awkward cycle when that "Nadeshiko Rock" song from [[Pop'n
** Then came the LincleLink events for Resort Anthem and Lincle, whose point was to allow players to unlock songs from the latest Jubeat versions on ''IIDX'' and vice-versa by playing certain combinations of songs on both.
* [[Retraux]]: The Parallel Rotation extra stage system in ''SIRIUS''.
* [[Rule of Fun]]: It's not really DJ simulation anymore. But does that really matter?▼
* [[Robot Dog]]: The mascot for ''SIRIUS'' is one.
▲* [[Rule of Fun]]: It's not really DJ simulation anymore. But does that really matter?
* [[Sequel Escalation]]: The difficulty scale originally went from 1 to 7. Then came the 7+, which were later relabeled as 8. Then there were 8+s. Then Version 12 bumped it up to be out of ''12
** But, [[The Computer Is a Lying Bastard]]. Before Happy Sky introduced 9-12, the 7Keys/Hyper difficulty rating would be exactly the same as the Another difficulty rating. This caused hard songs to be mislabeled. One of the most [[Egregious]] examples is "Mr. T (Take me higher)", rated a 10 on Another after Happy Sky, to be labeled as a ''4''. Even worse than that is "5.1.1.", which up to Happy Sky was rated a 1 on Normal and Hyper, but has a [[Surprise Difficulty|pretty]] [[That One Boss|brutal]] Another chart.
* [[Series Mascot]]: Tran, the [[Humanoid Aliens|Humanoid Alien]], he appears in several background videos. But
* [[Seven Deadly Sins]]: Lincle introduces a series of bosses named after the seven sins.
** [[Greed]]: Mamonis, a man apparently made of shadows who attacks using money...
** [[Lust]]: Ashemu, a [[Horny Devils|succubus]] with knives...
** [[Sloth]]: Bulluvegola, a set of stained-glass circles...
** [[Villainous Glutton|Gluttony]]: Beridzebeth, some sort of pink mech with wings and a scythe...
** [[Pride]]: Rche, an {{spoiler|trap}} angel with four black wings...
** [[Envy]]: Levaslater, a mech that resembles a blue dragon...
** [[Wrath]]: STN... another mech soldier
** Apocalypse: Neulakyussra, a four-armed, three-headed being {{spoiler|and the true form of STN}}, infused with the power of the seven sins...
** Rebirth: [[Spell My Name
* [[Soundtrack Dissonance]]: "Sasoribi"/"Scorpion Fire"/"Anti-Ares", "Ganymede" and "Bag" to name a few (the latter debuting in ''[[Dance Dance Revolution]]'' first).
* [[Spell My Name
* [[Standard Snippet]]/[[Sampling]]: For some bizarre reason, a stock sample of someone yelling "SOMEBODY SCREAM!" appeared in two different songs on Gold (Second Heaven and FIRE FIRE), followed by a sample of someone saying "1-2-3-4-5-6 do it!" appearing on ''three'' different songs on DJ Troopers. ''Two'' of these were Military Splash songs; one of which, aptly titled "Do it!! Do it!!", consisted almost ''entirely'' of that sample..
** [[Sampled Up]]: A kors k boss song on Lincle (fittingly, the one representing the sin of Greed) is pretty much a whole bunch of kors k songs thrown into a blender. No wonder its titled "[[Meaningful Name|THE SAMPLING PARADISE]]".
* [[Stellar Name]]: [http://vjarmy.com/wiki/index.php/Jun_Wakita Jun Wakita's] trademark. "Regulus", "Spica" and "Scorpion Fire" are all named after stars (SF is an allusion to Alpha Scorpii/Antares), "moon_child" and "Ganymede" refer to moons, and "Waltz of the Big Dogs" refers to a constellation.
* [[Take That]]: When Ryutaro Nakahara stopped using an asterisk and started to use a star for his Ryu☆ alias, his brother kept asking his "What's with that?" The song "Be
* [[Theme Naming]]: Since the 11th main installment of the ''IIDX'' series, every installment has had some sort of color theme to it, with a subtitle relating to the colors, such as "RED" ([[Fun with Acronyms|Revolutionary Energetic Diversification]]), "Gold,", "DJ Troopers", "Empress", "Sirius", "Resort Anthem", "Lincle" and now "Tricoro". The theme of 19, "Lincle", raised a few eyebrows: either for sounding like [[Gratuitous English]] or for breaking the "dark/light" cycle that had begun on 11th (by having a blue and orange logo). However, it began to make sense more when it was revealed that it would integrate with Konami's new "e-Amusement Gate" community, and have linking events with Jubeat Copious (which was released the same day). There's actually a bit of a [[Memetic Mutation|running joke]] amongst certain ''IIDX'' communities in both Japan and the west that Bemani and Pepsi (and occasionally other soft drink manufacturers) conspire to create new color-coded flavors for each installment. Every subtitled style has a flavor of Pepsi (or Mountain Dew in some cases) that seems literally made for each other; it has extended to other Bemani franchises on occasion, such as Pop'n Music with ''Carnival''-flavored Pepsi...
** Also, the Extra Stage songs often have some kind of theme to them. See [[The Four Gods]] above. ''IIDX 16: Empress'' also has a set of regular One More Extra Stage songs with a sweets theme and an alternative Extra Stage called EMPRESS PLACE that centered around former "empresses" like Cleopatra and Marie Antionette.▼
▲* [[The Artifact]]: Remember back in the day? When this game actually ''did'' primarily have hip-hop, and as such an actual justification for having scratching in its controls? Yet, it remains, even though most of the songs are now either hardcore electronica or pop. The IIDX series ''did'' start with mostly J-pop and R&B, but then began to diversify, to the point where on most songs, the turntable is just another trigger for sounds that aren't scratching.
** Similarly, in ''15th Style: DJ TROOPERS'', there is a new version of Cardinal Gate called ''Military Splash'' that has 4 Bemani artists hiding their identities behind battle formation aliases.
▲** That hasn't stopped songs with legitimate scratching from showing up in the modern era though. The OMES on Resort Anthem had gratuitous scratching as its main gimmick.
*** Lion = {{spoiler|dj TAKA}}.▼
*** Kraken = {{spoiler|Ryu*}}.▼
*** Eagle = {{spoiler|Kosuke Saito
▲** Also, the Extra Stage songs often have some kind of theme to them. See [[The Four Gods]] above. IIDX 16: Empress also has a set of regular One More Extra Stage songs with a sweets theme and an alternative Extra Stage called EMPRESS PLACE that centered around former "empresses" like Cleopatra and Marie Antionette.
*** Humanoid = {{spoiler|DJ Yoshitaka}}.▼
▲** Similarly, in ''15th Style: DJ TROOPERS'', there is a new version of Cardinal Gate called ''Military Splash'' that has 4 Bemani artists hiding their identities behind battle formation aliases.
** In
▲*** Lion = {{spoiler|dj TAKA}}
▲*** Scorpion = {{spoiler|Toshiyuki Kakuta, aka L.E.D.}}
▲*** Kraken = {{spoiler|Ryu*}}
▲*** Eagle = {{spoiler|Kosuke Saito, aka kors k, who is also a known artist outside of Bemani}}
▲*** Humanoid = {{spoiler|DJ Yoshitaka}}
▲** In Sirius, the extra stage system was a series of [[Nostalga Level|Nostalga Levels]] based off versions 11 through 15. Each tier had two previously console exclusive tracks, a new remix of a song from that version, and a new song performed under an alias used by a boss song on that version. The songs even used the interface skins from their respective versions.
* [[Title Drop]]: "GOLD RUSH" does this (with the "IIDX GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOLD!" [[Title Scream]] from the opening), and then proceeds to name off ''every single IIDX game up to that point'' during the breakdown
** This seems to be common across the two Michael a la mode songs, since "
* [[Title Scream]]: IIDX GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOLD!
* [[Universal Adaptor Cast]]: For example, [http://vjarmy.com/wiki/index.php/Ereki Ereki], [[White-Haired Pretty Boy]] has a villain-like demeanor in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vmzwfI52Ww TERRA'S videos], but is simply a [[Camera Fiend|stalking photographer]] in songs like [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzN-nqXJTS8 Love-Shine]. This is just one example of very surprising dissonances with personalities in different videos.
** Interestingly meta in the series' "canon" because every character has externally-established (typically through art books) backgrounds and in actuality are simply ''people who play IIDX
* [[Variable Mix]]
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[[Category:Video Games of the 1990s]]
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