Osu Tatakae Ouendan 2

DS

Moero Nekketsu Rhythm Damashii: Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan 2

by Ty Shughart - June 3, 2007, 1:47 pm PDT
Total comments: 8

Once you start, you'll need to call on the Ouendan to help you stop playing this game.

Ouendan 2: Ouen Harder!

There's something special about Ouendan and its western spinoff, Elite Beat

Agents. It's not just that the fast-paced screen-tapping can't be replicated

on any other system, or the great music and brilliant art contained within.

It's the whole wonderful, upbeat, and wacky theme of cheering for people.

There's nothing else quite like it, and it has a really amazing effect of

brightening your whole day.

Moero Nekketsu Rhythm Damashii: Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan 2: The Longest Title

Ever, has 19 full-length licensed Japanese pop and rock songs, up from Ouendan 1's 15. (Interested folks might find a song list

href='http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/forums/messageview.cfm?catid=5&threadid=20797'>here.)

Like in the previous Ouendan, the goal is to cheer along with the music by

tapping circular marks along with the rhythm. Some basic new features

include being able to quickly see your best score and grade on each song

directly on the song selection map, saving replays of your performances,

being able to quickly skip song intros, and little perks like that. You can

even save a recording of a performance and then play against it in a

faux-multiplayer mode if you don't have any other friends to play with

(they'll be needing their own copies of the game, y'know).

Once again, the story follows the Ouendan we know and love as they help

people out of tough situations, but it seems like a rival Ouendan group has

moved into town. The stages are divided between them until the final stages.

And then something interesting happens.. no spoilers here, but here's a

hint: Ouendan has to save the world, again! As it's an import game, all of

the text is in Japanese, but the language barrier is a huge non-issue. The

game is simple enough to understand, and many people consider the

all-Japanese interface part of its appeal. It seems like a couple of the

story sequences are a bit weirder now, actually.. selling shoes to aliens

seems like a bit of a stretch.

Ouendan has been one of the best games on the DS since it came out, and

Ouendan 2 is a worthy sequel. There aren't any radical changes, just a

bigger, nicer version with 19 new songs. Owning at least one of the Ouendan

games can't be recommended enough.

Score

GraphicsSoundControlGameplayLastabilityFinal
999.58.599
Graphics

Manga-like scenes play out on the top screen, while the polygonal Ouendan crew cheers on the bottom. It's sharp, colorful, and altogether a pretty slick presentation.

Sound

Some of the 19 songs are actually originals rather than covers. They all sound great, but maybe a little bit lossy from compression, if anything.

Control

Touching is good. Yeah, I'd like to see somebody try to keep up with tagging marks this fast and precisely with a mouse or light gun. A larger, pen-sized stylus is recommended more than an original DS stylus for maximum comfort.

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Gameplay

It's an inspired concept, and it's fun and addictive. There's a bit of a problem on getting stuck on certain songs for a while, though; the difficulty can ramp up a fair bit between songs.

Lastability

Unless you can S-rank everything in a week like some kind of Youtube superstar, you'll be playing this for quite a while.

Final

This is a fantastic game, and comes highly recommended for purchase. It's easy to understand, especially for an import, and it's incredibly fun.

Review Page 1

Summary

Pros
  • 19 full-length songs
  • Easy to learn, hard to master!
  • More little touches and conveniences over the original
Cons
  • Gaps in difficulty might seem a bit much sometimes
  • Requires multiple cartridges for multiplayer
  • Some of the stories behind certain levels are a bit too weird or difficult to understand
Review Page 2: Conclusion

Talkback

LuigiHannJune 03, 2007

There are some odd factual errors, but other than that it's a nice review.
(All the songs are covers, if I'm not mistaken, and there were 19 songs in EBA, etc)
Also, are you sure there's no single-cart multiplayer? EBA had a limited single-cart mode, but with the Japanese menus I can't quite tell.

Mode7June 03, 2007

EBA does in fact have 19 songs. According to wikipedia.com, but by no means fact, four of the songs in Ouendan 2 are original versions.
I am curious as to single-cart multiplayer on OTO2. I think one player just sets up a game (as normal) and then the other has to go to DS download play, wherein the host game and DS will detect it and send out, though I'm not sure.

LuigiHannJune 03, 2007

Hmm, that's interesting. There was one original song in the first Ouendan, so it's not unheard of. Shame I can't read Japanese, or I'd simply check the game's credits.

MashiroJune 03, 2007

There are indeed 19 songs in EBA, 3 of which are bonus tracks. The tracks are:
- 'Walkie Talkie Man'
- 'Makes No Difference'
- 'Sk8er Boi'
- 'I Was Born to Love You'
- 'Rock This Town'
- 'Highway Star'
- 'Y.M.C.A'
- 'September'
- 'Canned Heat'
- 'Material Girl'
- 'La La'
- 'You're The Inspiration'
- 'Let's Dance'
- 'The Anthem'
- 'Without A Fight'
- 'Jumpin' Jack Flash'
- 'Believe'
- 'A-B-C'
- 'Survivor'

S-U-P-E-RTy Shughart, Staff AlumnusJune 03, 2007

Oops, I must have miscounted. @_@ I'll fix that up right away

MegaByteAaron Kaluszka, Associate EditorJune 03, 2007

I changed the part about the covers vs. originals. You don't need to read Japanese to see that the credits have both the original and cover artists names. In several cases the same names are listed for both.

NephilimJune 03, 2007

This game gets a 6 for not having Hulk Bryman! in the werewolf stage

AManatee2June 04, 2007

this game is so amazing. i got it as well. just beat it on 'hard'.
i have to say. i agree. this is by far much deeper and more enjoyable (and harder) than the first game. plus, the 'being about to skip everything' thing is my favourite part. i didnt even finish the first game simply because i couldn't retry instantly at the end.

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Game Profile

  • Reviews (1)
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  • Artwork (20)
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GenreRhythm
DeveloperiNiS
Players1 - 4

Worldwide Releases

Moero Nekketsu Rhythm Damashii: Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan 2
ReleaseMay 17, 2007
PublisherNintendo

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