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Turntable video games

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DJ Hero
2009 video game
Beatmania
(styled as beatmania) is a rhythm video game developed and distributed by Japanese game developer Konami and first released in December 1997. It contributed largely to the boom of music games in 1998, and the series expanded not only with arcade sequels, but also moved to home consoles and other portable devices, achieving a million unit sales. The Bemani line of music games from Konami is named after the series, was first adopted in the arcade release of Beatmania 3rdMix and kept ever since. The series came to an end with the last game being Beatmania The Final, released in 2002.
Beaterator
Beaterator is a music mixer released in September 2009 by Rockstar Games for the PlayStation Portable and in December 2009 for iOS. Beaterator was developed by Rockstar Leeds in collaboration with Timbaland.
Beatmania IIDX
video game series
DJ Hero 2
2010 video game
eJay
eJay is a series of musical arrangement software, and video games, primarily for Microsoft Windows. The first edition, Dance eJay, was released in 1997. It supports eight tracks of audio and, as with its successors, permits the arrangement of sound bites by a drag-and-drop interface. Since the original Dance eJay, there have been many releases catering to different music genres and users, including techno and hip-hop, as well as a PlayStation 2 edition called eJay Clubworld.
DJMax
DJMax (Korean: 디제이맥스, dijeimaegseu) is an action-rhythm video game series created by Neowiz MUCA. Games feature mostly experimental music and visual art from Korean DJs, artists and composers. Known South Korean experimental group Clazziquai Project has also made songs for the series. There are also a few Japanese composers who have given significant contributions to the series.
DJMax Respect
2017 rhythm video game by Rocky Studio and Neowiz MUCA
EZ2DJ
EZ2DJ (known officially as EZ2AC after 2013, now known as EZ2ON) is a partially-discontinued series of Arcade DJ simulation music video games created by the South Korean company AmuseWorld. The game is commonly viewed as a Korean-developed counterpart to Konami's beatmania series, similar to the way Pump It Up emerged as a domestic alternative to Dance Dance Revolution. The game is known for its extreme difficulty, which increased progressively across releases and became a defining characteristic of the series, featuring dense and highly technical note charts, fast tempos, unconventional rhyth
Daigasso! Band Brothers
2004 video game
DJMax Portable
2006 video game
Turntable video games — category · Vinony