RomWize

Space Channel 5 (USA)

Sega Dreamcast
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
2000
82
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✪ Reviewed on December 19, 2024
76

A funky rhythm game by Mizuguchi with a retro disco staging. Intuitive controls, sparkling choreography and an irresistible soundtrack. A pop gem of the Dreamcast.

Your verdict
Category
Rhythm 1 player 3+
Description
Ulala, Space Channel 5 reporter, chains dance steps to rescue alien hostages in this Sega rhythm game. Published by Sega, released in the United States in June 2000. Rhythm game with dance sequence memorisation, colourful retro-futuristic atmosphere, groovy music and iconic Ulala character. American version.

Space Channel 5 review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
A tangy retro-future, bright shapes and frenzied choreography: everything evokes a 1960s pop reread in garish colours. Ulala's flamboyant silhouette and the geometric sets compose a style as groovy as the game's spirit. This visual whimsy, gleefully kitsch, keeps an irresistible charm.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Short"
Technical info
💾0,95 GB 📅12/09/2000
Published by Sega

Space Channel 5 (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The NTSC release of Space Channel 5 is the US version of Mizuguchi/UGA's game, distributed by Sega in the United States. Collector value comes from a modest print and from this version being one of the least widely distributed Mizuguchi Dreamcast releases.

A cult cover

It's all sixties pop: Ulala poses, mic in hand, over punchy oranges and pinks worthy of a retro-futurist magazine. The rounded typography and vitamin-bright flats announce the spacefaring musical and its irresistible groove. Joyful and stylish, it remains a peak of fully owned kitsch design.

Is Space Channel 5 still worth playing in 2026?

An original creation by Tetsuya Mizuguchi, Space Channel 5 invents an intergalactic rhythm where Ulala frees humans captured by the Morolians by repeating dance sequences. The seventies pop aesthetic, the catchy soundtrack and the delightfully kitsch charm make for a unique experience. Short and accessible, the title keeps a striking freshness thanks to a singular visual identity. For anyone fond of atypical rhythm games and bold propositions, it is a recommendation as joyful as it is memorable, even decades later.

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