![]() So, whenever I used it to play StepMania, I’d get a “Miss” on footwork that required me to step on both the right and left buttons. Apparently, I couldn’t get the left and right buttons pressed at the same time. It worked all right but it wasn’t as easy as I’d hope. When I got home, I quickly connected my dance pad to the adapter. I was very excited to know if it’ll actually work. That is, I could connect a PSone/PS2 controller to this adapter and have it connected to my PC’s USB port and I could use the controller on my PC! I bought a Super Dual Box USB-PSX Controller Adapter for $50 at Harvey Norman today. I later found out that there is such a thing as a USB-PS2 adapter. Super Dual Box USB-PSX Controller Adapter. I could still keep up with the necessary footwork but I wouldn’t get any feedback on whether I was committing mistakes or performing very well. This meant that it would run just like how the songs I’ve recorded on VHS. It was simply great! It can even be set to auto-play mode so that it would play the whole song and supply the correct footwork steps automatically without my help. I got some songs from the Internet and I was able to run them on StepMania as expected. Apparently, given the right files, it could actually work like DDR. I went back to the website and looked around. I wasn’t able to play it yet though as I didn’t have songs installed, it said. To my pleasant surprise, when I started the software, the user-interface that greeted me had the same look-and-feel of a DDR game! So, I downloaded the software and had it installed on my PC. All games can be played using the keyboard, but the real fun comes when using specially designed controllers, like a dance pad or hand sensors. Notes scroll up from the bottom of the screen, and the player must hit the corresponding button on the controller in time to the. The games played by StepMania are rhythm games. In the future, it will support games similar to BeatMania, Guitar Freaks, DrumMania, and more. Currently, it supports games similar to Dance Dance Revolution, Pump It Up, EZ 2 Dancer, and Para Para Paradise. StepMania is capable of playing many game types. The home site for the software described it as follows: Well, another item that popped up while I was searching for DDR games on the Internet was a freeware software called StepMania. There must be another alternative, I thought. Anyway, if I wanted to play DDR on PS2, it would take a long while before I could start doing so and the DDR game I really wanted wouldn’t be what I would get. I would probably need to buy in online and have it imported from the US or something. The problem was that, there doesn’t seem to be any DDR games for the PS2 for sale in Australia. A new PS2 is around $240 while a pre-owned PS2 is at $150. I canvassed at Electronics Boutique (EB), Dick Smith Powerhouse (DSE) and Harvey Norman for PS2s. The consolation though was that we already own the dance pads for PSone and those would be compatible with PS2. Since we didn’t own a PS2, that also meant we’d have to buy the console, too. The next best things were DDR Max and DDR Max 2 both for the Playstation 2 (PS2). Although I know the older DDR games existed for the PSone, those games were quite difficult to find. Unfortunately, my search yielded nothing. I missed my favourite songs from the game like Butterfly, Boom Boom Dollar, Captain Jack, and Wonderland. I was also specifically looking for the DDR 3rd Mix version of the game as it was my favourite from playing it in the arcades in Makati. So, I searched the Internet about getting some PSone DDR games. Even if I improve in actuality, I wouldn’t get any feedback from the game (as it was now only just a record of the game). Even though it was my own footwork that was recorded, it was pretty static. Second, even if I make a mistake in the footwork, it doesn’t really matter as the footwork performance was pre-recorded. First, after playing the tape over again a few times, the song selection and song sequence got pretty old. In my recent post, I mentioned that I love playing Dance Dance Revolution and that I recorded onto VHS some of the DDR songs I played on Raquel’s Playstation One (PSOne) so that I no longer need to load up the PSOne everytime I wanted to play DDR.
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