Karaoke Revolution: Difference between revisions

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A [[Rhythm Game]] co-developed by Konami, Blitz Games, and Harmonix, where players must sing along to popular songs while being judged on if they're singing on the right pitch or not, as indicated by a piano roll and pitch bars accompanying the scrolling lyrics.
A [[Rhythm Game]] co-developed by Konami, Blitz Games, and Harmonix, where players must sing along to popular songs while being judged on if they're singing on the right pitch or not, as indicated by a piano roll and pitch bars accompanying the scrolling lyrics.


The original version of the game was released in November 2003 on the [[PlayStation]] 2, followed by several [[Mission Pack Sequel|MissionPackSequels]] (labelled as "volumes") that added features such as ports to other consoles (Xbox on Volume 2, [[Game Cube]] on Party), duets (Volume 3), and dance pad support (Party). There were even versions under the guise of ''[[American Idol]]'' [[Home Game|home games]].
The original version of the game was released in November 2003 on the [[PlayStation]] 2, followed by several [[Mission Pack Sequel]]s (labelled as "volumes") that added features such as ports to other consoles (Xbox on Volume 2, [[Game Cube]] on Party), duets (Volume 3), and dance pad support (Party). There were even versions under the guise of ''[[American Idol]]'' [[Home Game|home games]].


The popularity of the series would begin to tamper off once Harmonix released ''[[Guitar Hero]]'', it too morphed into a phenomenon, but this time it was one much greater than what ''Karaoke Revolution'' achieved. Coinciding with Activision's acquisition of the franchise, Harmonix would throw together what it developed for both ''Guitar Hero'' and ''Karaoke Revolution'' (along with some other new mechanics) to create [[Rock Band|a certain other music game]].
The popularity of the series would begin to tamper off once Harmonix released ''[[Guitar Hero]]'', it too morphed into a phenomenon, but this time it was one much greater than what ''Karaoke Revolution'' achieved. Coinciding with Activision's acquisition of the franchise, Harmonix would throw together what it developed for both ''Guitar Hero'' and ''Karaoke Revolution'' (along with some other new mechanics) to create [[Rock Band|a certain other music game]].