*C&P comments from another board*
And it's a good game that utilize the DS. It's only available in Japan, however North America is getting a sequel called Elite Beat Agents that plays the same way, only it will have a different soundtrack and scenarios.
Here's the basic gist. You play as a cheer squad(a male cheer squad for the most part, but...) and it is your job to seek out people who are in trouble and in need of some encouragement to help them overcome their problems. You use the stylus to touch various numbers at the right time and the correct sequence on the screen in order to get the perfect cheering session. Sounds simple, right?
Yes the object of the game is pretty simple, however like most games in its genre the tricky part is getting the timing right.
The game starts out with two modes Easy and Normal, but you can unlock Hard mode after beating normal mode and Hell mode after beating that.
When you play the game for the very first time you are automatically thrusted into the tutorial mode. There, you can learn all the different beat icons in the game. The first kind are the standard stand-alone beat which is labeled by a number which you can touch once. There is also a conjoined variation of the beat in which you would have to hit the same beat multiple times. Another beat is a rolling drum beat in which you would drag a rolling ball using the stylus at the end of the note. A variation is the continuous rolling in which you drag the ball back and forward from on point to another until the beat is finished. The last beat is the spinning wheel in which you use the stylus to spin a wheel round and round until you fill a spin meter to the top before the beat hits the mark.
You can see what all the beats look like here: <a class="go2wpf-bbcode" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href=" http://http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/aosj/operation/index2.html "> http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/aosj/operation/index2.html
Now, while this game is in Japanese it is fairly easy to navigate(heck, there is a FAQ to tell you what the options are). The game also have auto save incase you are worried of accidentally erasing you game.
About the missions, you really don't need to know Japanese to know what is going on for each character's story since the manga-like panel presentation and the simplicity of their plots make it easy to follow. When the level starts with the music cue, the story takes place on the top screen while the game takes place on the touch screen. Though, you probably won't see some of the action on the topic screen while you are busy hitting the notes, at intervals you can see if you actually helped the person in need or not depending on your results each session.
About the music. Yes, it is liscenced music from well known Japanese music artists such as Asian Kung-Fu Generation and The Ufuls and while the sound isn't PSP-quality, it sounds dencet on the DS. And hey, it even has L'Arc~En~Ciel's Ready, Steady, Go!.
So, yes! I highly recommend it!
Here are some videos and pics coutesy of IGN:
I've wanted this game since I saw an article on it in EGM. We get our own version? Hopefully the music is just as good!
Thanks for the info, Ashide!
Yeah, ever since I seen the video of the gameplay I was like "I MUST OWN THIS". Although the new Elite Beat Agents will not have a kick a** soundtrack like this. =(
Well, we don't know about that since we don't know the full track listing of EBA.
It has Walkie Talkie Man, though, and that song bites.
*pssh* Ouendan has a song from Morning Musume.
But that didn't stop me from getting it.
Sounds like Feel the Magic to me.
No, it isn't anything like Feel the Magic because that game is a collection of mini-games like the Warioware series and also Spoilers (Select To Read): FtM is actually crap, you see.
Ouendan is in the same genre as any music game.