Five-button mode adds the D and L keys, both of which trigger the middle note so you can use whichever hand suits you best, while six-button mode gives those keys their own individual notes.
Sometimes a warning will pop up on the left or right of the screen meaning a side-note is coming and the appropriate Shift key takes care of it nicely. The way the tracks work on the four-button songs is notes stream down from the top of the screen in standard Guitar Hero/Rock Band style, and the A S and ‘ keys are used to type them away. The major change to this version of DJMAX is the ability to play with a standard keyboard, meaning there’s no shortage of buttons and everything can line up just right.
#Djmax respect v song list series#
Speaking as a complete newbie to the series I’m appreciating the generous library of four-note songs with multiple difficulty levels to choose from, but series veterans and the truly hardcore have eight-button songs and a mad barrage of notes to play with. One of the hallmarks of the series is its dedication to taking care of as many types of players as possible.
#Djmax respect v song list Ps4#
Now the latest version has migrated from PS4 to PC in the form of DJMAX Respect V, starting off in Steam’s Early Access with a huge library and plans to grow even bigger in the coming months. The series comes by its gameplay honestly, having initially come out over fifteen years ago, and in that time it’s only grown the fan-base while getting more polished with each new iteration. The screen holds a note track in the middle, with a video playing on either side to fill in the extra space, and each song has several different courses of varying difficulties to tap the music away to. Every game wants its own unique stamp on the genre but DJMAX is more about refining the basics to their purest form and then going insane from there. There’s a lot to be said about getting all fancy with the musical interaction, whether that be arcade setups with multiple spinning discs and light-up buttons or hopping into VR to wave away the notes.