Beatmania IIDX 7th Style | |
Developer: | Konami (Arcade), Konami Computer Entertainment Studio (Console) |
Publisher: | Konami (Arcade), Konami Computer Entertainment Studio (Console) |
Series: | Beatmania IIDX & Bemani |
Platforms: | Arcade & Sony PlayStation 2 |
Released: | Arcade: PlayStation 2: |
Genre: | Music |
Modes: | Single-player & Multiplayer |
Arcade System: | Bemani Twinkle |
beatmania IIDX 7th Style is the seventh game in the beatmania IIDX series of music video games. It was released in arcades by Konami in March 2002.
Beatmania IIDX tasks the player with performing songs through a controller consisting of seven key buttons and a scratchable turntable.[1] Hitting the notes with strong timing increases the score and groove gauge bar, allowing the player to finish the stage. Failing to do so depletes the gauge until it is empty, abruptly ending the song.[2]
The core gameplay remains the same in 7th Style. 5-key mode has been changed from a difficulty to its own modifier, allowing it to be used on any difficulty level as with normal charts. A new spinoff of Expert Mode also debuted, Daninintei (Class) mode, a mode containing a series of courses ranked so that each course is more difficult than the last, the highest rank course a player can beat in Dan mode is often used to compare players. Dan mode would have significant integration in future styles implementing the e-Amusement system, which could save a player's rank, and may also restrict access to specific songs based on their current rank.
This is the complete list of new songs from the arcade version of Beatmania IIDX 7th Style. Songs highlighted in green need to be unlocked. The Extra Stage (highlighted red) is "MAX 300", while the One More Extra Stage is "革命".
Genre | Song | Artist | |
---|---|---|---|
RAVE | "2002" | tiger YAMATO | |
FAKE JAZZ | "9 o'clocks" | SYMPHONIC DEFOGGERS | |
RENAISSANCE | "A" | D.J.Amuro | |
ALTERNATIVE HOUSE | "AVE DE RAPINA" | Shawn The Horny Master | |
FILTER HOUSE | "Bad Routine" | D.J. Spugna | |
TRIBAL BASS | "BRING HER DOWN" | AKIRA YAMAOKA | |
12 BEAT | "Burning Heat! (Full Option Mix)" | Mr.T with Motoaki.F | |
SUPER EUROBEAT | "BURNING UP FOR YOU" | SARA | |
BIG BEAT | "Cheer Train" | Fuzita Blender | |
DRUM 'N' BASS | "CLOUDY MUSIC" | SLAKE | |
HYPER ROCK BEAT | "D2R" | NAOKI | |
HYPER EUROBEAT | "DESTINY" | NAOKI feat. Paula Terry | |
SOUL | "E.V CAFE" | reo nagumo feat. hajime.y | |
TECHNO | "entrance" | Kobo project with Masa | |
PROGRESSIVE JAZZ | "foreplay" | Osamu Kubota | |
UK GARAGE/2-STEP | "General Relativity" | SYMPHONIC DEFOGGERS | |
HIP HOP & SOUL | "Glorious Days" | Noria | |
BIG BEAT | "Gravity" | TaQ | |
HOUSE | "Happy Wedding" | ASKA | |
SUPER EUROBEAT | "HEARTBEAT" | NATHALIE | |
TRANCE | "i feel..." | AKIRA YAMAOKA | |
EUROBEAT | "Last Message" | good-cool feat. Meg | |
AMBIENT POP | "Let the Snow Paint Me" | Sana | |
SUPER EUROBEAT | "LOVE GENERATION" | SUZY LAZY | |
NEW WAVE | "Love Me Do" | AKIRA YAMAOKA | |
YEYE | "Marmalade Reverie" | Orange Lounge | |
2STEP | "more deep (ver.2.1)" | Togo project feat. Sana | |
TRANCE | "Never Look Back" | DuMonde | |
LIBRARY BEATS | "New York" | Fuzita Blender | |
SUPER EUROBEAT | "REMEMBER ME" | LESLIE PARRISH | |
SOFT ROCK | "Secret Tale" | dj nagureo feat. asuka.m | |
SUPER EUROBEAT | "SOLID GOLD" | DUSTY | |
POPS | "Somebody Like You" | good-cool | |
HOUSE | "Spica" | D.JW | |
HARD HOUSE | "Spooky" | good-cool | |
TECHNO | "stoic" | TaQ | |
TRANCE | "The Beauty Of Silence" | Svenson & Gielen | |
TRANCE | "The Sound Of Goodbye" | Armin van Buuren presents:Perpetuous Dreamer | |
TRANCE | "Tomorrow Perfume" | dj TAKA | |
Trance | "Traces" | TaQ | |
ELECTROSHOCK | "ZERO-ONE" | Mr.T | |
HARDCORE TECHNO | "MAX 300" | Ω | |
ORCHESTRAL | "革命" | dj TAKA with NAOKI |
The home version of 7th Style was released 2 years later in 2004 for the PlayStation 2. It was First Series that Developed from Konami Computer Entertainment Studio. It contained two preview songs from 8th and 9th Style, as well as some revivals. 5-Key was left as a mode instead of a modifier (unlike the arcade version), and unlike future home releases, the special Extra Stage methods were not present. Masters Mode was also introduced as a modified version of Survival Mode.