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Dance Dance Revolution - Club Version - Dreamcast Edition (Japan)

Sega Dreamcast
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1999
84
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✪ Reviewed on April 9, 2026
80

DDR at home on Dreamcast, energetic and uplifting just right. The setlist holds up, charts stay solid and the sweat rolls fast with a dance mat. A rhythm classic for the living room.

Your verdict
Category
Rhythm 1 player 3+
Description
Dancers follow choreographic steps to perfection in this Dreamcast version of Konami's DDR arcade dance game. Published by Konami, released in Japan in April 1999. Dance rhythm game with dance mat, varied DDR series songs, solo and versus modes. Japanese edition.

Dance Dance Revolution - Club Version - Dreamcast Edition review

3/5
Art direction
"Polished"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Frantic eurobeat and dance rhythms cut for the mat: every track pushes your feet to follow the beat without respite. The energetic beats, calibrated for rhythmic stepping, turn the living room into a dance floor. This supercharged selection, a pioneer on the console, keeps an utterly intact power to get you moving.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,94 GB 📅22/04/1999
Published by Konami

Dance Dance Revolution - Club Version - Dreamcast Edition (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Dance Dance Revolution Club Version Dreamcast Edition is one of the rare DDR versions ported to a console, released only in Japan by Konami. Collector value comes from the limited local print, from the specificity of the Club Version (with exclusive track selection) and from the absolute scarcity of the game outside Japan, where the Bemani segment on Dreamcast stayed confidential.

Is Dance Dance Revolution - Club Version - Dreamcast Edition still worth playing in 2026?

A home edition aimed at Japanese clubs, this Dance Dance Revolution build keeps a solid tracklist mixing Konami originals and pop covers. Without a proper dance mat the feel is greatly diminished, yet with the right accessory it lands very close to the arcade boards of the era. Its appeal today rests above all on historical value and nostalgia for those who lived the great DDR wave. Recommended mainly to equipped collectors rather than newcomers approaching the rhythm genre.

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