

Evening the difficulty out gives In the Groove a smoother transition from song to song, which should be good for players who are looking to improve.ĭifferent arrow movement effects can add to the challenge. Some medium tracks in DDR will be easy for average players, while others get too difficult.

By comparison, the DDR series has always offered a ridiculously easy setting for beginners, but the medium setting really tends to vary. Once you move up from there, things start to get really tough, and the hardest setting is truly for pros. Medium difficulty ups the challenge properly, but competent dancers should still be able to complete just about every song on this setting. The first two settings are perfect for beginning players. In the Groove's balance between its five difficulty levels is one of its best features. Like the Dance Dance Revolution games, In the Groove offers multiple difficulty settings for each song. Stringing together good, well-timed steps will start a combo meter counting, but missing too many steps will end the game. You'll see arrows scrolling up the screen, in time with some music, and it's up to you to step on the correct arrow on the dance mat when it scrolls up your screen and hits the proper position. Despite these different modes, the gameplay remains largely the same. There are multiple ways to play In the Groove, including a fitness mode that counts calories, a double mode that lets one player play with two dance mats, a nonstop string of four or five tracks called marathon, as well as practice and two-player options.

Not exactly a Revolution, but close enough. But with its own unique song list, well-balanced difficulty settings, and a few unique twists of its own, In the Groove is a solid addition to the genre, even if it is basically a DDR clone. For those people, there's Red Octane's In the Groove, a dance game that, for the most part, re-creates the entire DDR concept and contains most of the familiar modes you'd expect from a DDR game. But now that the genre's popularity has gently returned to niche status after a brief time in the limelight, Konami is down to making one or two dance games a year. When it comes to the dance mat genre, Dance Dance Revolution has pretty much remained the only game in town.
