The Dance Dance Revolution series started on November 20, 1998 and has grown to a very sizable collections of games in the franchise. This list of Dance Dance Revolution games documents every single game released including which systems and formats and which regions those games were released in. This list only includes games that have been released to the general public.
These lists are sorted by platform of release, then region, then best-known release date, then regional or renamed version title, if any one. Releases that have sold more than one million copies or have been re-issued as Greatest Hits are colored orange.
Originally Dance Dance Revolution Ultramix was going to be a Windows title, sequeling Dance Dance Revolution which had been released a couple of years before. Screenshots of the game under development were released to video game news sites showing an interface that closely resembled the previous Windows game. Later in development the game was completely changed visually and released on the Microsoft Xbox.
"Let the Beat Hit 'Em" is the title of a number-one R&B single by Lisa Lisa and Cult Jam from their 1991 album Straight Outta Hell's Kitchen. The song spent one week at number-one on the US R&B chart (September 14, 1991), reaching #37 on the Billboard Hot 100. On the US dance charts, "Let the Beat Hit 'Em" was the third and final number one for the group. One year later, a Dutch duo produced a 3:40 long remix. There is also an unrelated song with the same title which has appeared in Konami's various Bemani music games.
The song was sampled on the track "Too Much of a Good Thing" from Kylie Minogue's 1991 album Let's Get To It and on the 2005 track "Glücklich" by Heiko & Maiko.
"Hit 'Em" is a single by Oakland Hip Hop artists Zion I & The Grouch, released in 2006 on Om Records. The single was the first released from their collaborative album Heroes in the City of Dope, and features Bay-area rapper Mistah F.A.B. The single's B-side is "Trains & Planes", produced by Headnodic of the Crown City Rockers.
Ryan Daniel Montgomery (born July 5, 1977), better known by his stage name Royce da 5'9", is an American rapper from Detroit, Michigan. He is best known for his longtime association with Eminem as well as his solo career, recording primarily with Carlos "6 July" Broady and DJ Premier, as well as ghostwriting for the likes of Diddy and Dr. Dre. Royce is one half of the rap duo Bad Meets Evil with Eminem, 1/4 of the hip hop group Slaughterhouse with Joe Budden, Joell Ortiz and Crooked I, and 1/2 of the hip hop group PRhyme with DJ Premier. The editors of About.com ranked him No. 30 on their list of the Top 50 MCs of Our Time (1987–2007).
He moved to Oak Park, Michigan when he was 10 years old, later acquiring the nickname "Royce" during high school after wearing a Turkish link chain with an R pendant resembling the Rolls Royce symbol. He started rapping at age 18, influenced mainly by Ras Kass, Redman, Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., Esham, Detroit Most Wanted, and N.W.A. He signed his first deal in 1998 with Tommy Boy Records. After the label shut down, he signed a deal with Columbia where he started recording an album called Rock City, referring to Detroit's former status as home to Motown Records. When the project was heavily bootlegged, Royce left the label for Koch to re-record some of the album, eventually releasing it in 2002 as Rock City (Version 2.0). While the album did not sell very well, the DJ Premier-produced single "Boom" gained Royce some underground recognition and eventually resulted in the two working together more closely.
In order to play with this record
You must tune your bass to up
Look out
One, two, three, four, hit it
Rock the house, yall
Let the beat hit em
Let the music take control
The beat goes round and
Round and up and down and
Let the beat hit em
Got to learn to let
Go go go go go go go go go,
All right
get away me fun
Rock the house, yall
Its time to move,
Its time to move, h,
He-he-hey yeah, he-he-hey yeah
The beat goes round
And round and up and down and
Let the beat hit em
Got to learn to let
Go go go go go go go go go,
Keep movin, And round and up and down and
Let the beat hit em
Got to learn to let
Go go go go go go go go go,
Theres enough,
What will the people say