![]() The base download costs about $Aus10, and comes with about a dozen tracks. But none of that is possible with Miku Flick/02, and from a purely fan service point of view, that’s actually quite disappointing. I also liked playing around with the costumes they would wear in the tracks. I do this because MEIKO music tracks – and specifically Nostalogic and Change Me – are so completely sexy and, well, yeah. One of my favourite little hobbies within Project Diva f games was sticking Hatsune Miku in MEIKO music tracks. Each track has a specific video that plays in the background, and that video has a specific costume and character associated with it. There are no costume or character changes.For this reason alone I just can’t see any situation where I’ll reach for the Miku Diva games on my Vita when I could instead just take my iPhone. And, let’s face it, it’s the characters as much as anything else that draw people to the Miku games. Each of the characters look incredibly detailed and large (especially on my large iPhone 6 screen, which Miku Flick has been updated to be fully compatible with). It’s been a couple of months since I last played the Miku arcade game in Japan, but from my memory of that game, what you get on the phone is basically the same quality. The screenshots simply don’t do it justice because in motion this game looks far better than the best console option ( Project Diva F 2nd on the PlayStation 3). The visuals are absolutely mind-blowingly incredible.Now this is creative stuff – in fact, I’d suggest that it’s the most innovative rhythm game I’ve played to date. I realise this sounds like it would be impossible to play unless you knew Japanese, but the visual cues about which “key” to tap, and the direction to swipe it, mean you don’t actually need to understand what the word, or lyric, in question is. But with this one you need to tap or swipe Japanese characters that appear as a keyboard on the bottom of the screen in time with the lyrics of the song in question. It works really well, but it’s not the most creative or innovative approach to a rhythm game. In the other Miku games you simply tap buttons (or the touch screen, in the case of Project Mirai) in time with the music. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |