I also posted this on snapps theory post, but I want to get some feedback.
I personally hate home versions, unless they have a metal pad. Plus it makes us old-school DDR players look bad. Back when you had to choose your song wisely for fear of losing your tokens on a new harder song. How fast we got good depended on our willingness to dish out more tokens for a harder song we might lose to. I love the arcade scene, and I loved playing DDR when it was new. But now that more people are buying the home versions, they can play any song they want, on any difficulty with no danger to their wallet if they fail. I think it's hurting the arcade scene. And also breeding a bunch of new, punk kids who think they are awesome because they can beat MaxX Unlimited on a fluffy pad with the difficulty turned down. Not to mention those crappy help arrows. I'd like to know what some of the DDR vets think about this. For all those who still think of light as basic and standard as trick.
I personally hate home versions, unless they have a metal pad. Plus it makes us old-school DDR players look bad. Back when you had to choose your song wisely for fear of losing your tokens on a new harder song. How fast we got good depended on our willingness to dish out more tokens for a harder song we might lose to. I love the arcade scene, and I loved playing DDR when it was new. But now that more people are buying the home versions, they can play any song they want, on any difficulty with no danger to their wallet if they fail. I think it's hurting the arcade scene. And also breeding a bunch of new, punk kids who think they are awesome because they can beat MaxX Unlimited on a fluffy pad with the difficulty turned down. Not to mention those crappy help arrows. I'd like to know what some of the DDR vets think about this. For all those who still think of light as basic and standard as trick.



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