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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Gameplay  





2 Releases  



2.1  Arcade  





2.2  iOS  







3 See also  





4 Notes  





5 References  














Reflec Beat






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Reflec Beat
Reflec Beat Volzza machine
Genre(s)Music
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Platform(s)Arcade, iOS
First releaseReflec Beat
November 4, 2010
Latest releaseReflec Beat: The Reflesia of Eternity
December 1, 2016

Reflec Beat[a] is a series of music video games by Konami which debuted in 2010. Reflec Beat uses a touch screen as its main method of control - the first in the Bemani series to do so - and has gameplay based on 2-player competition, which has been compared to air hockey.[1]

Originally released for arcades, six versions, not including expanded update versions, have been released. The gameplay has been ported to iOS as REFLEC BEAT plus, which has in turn been localised and released worldwide as REFLEC BEAT +.

Gameplay[edit]

Reflec Beat's gameplay consists of touching circular "Objects" as they reach the judgement area. There are two sets of judgement areas, one for each player and colour-coded red and blue.[2] Usually the second player is computer controlled, but can be human controlled using linked arcade machines, or a single iPad with the iOS versions.

After the player selected a song, Reflec Beat will automatically find an opponent who is playing the same song. If no opponents were found, it will automatically start the computer-controlled mode.

Players are scored on the timing with which they hit the Objects; in increasing order of accuracy and score, timing can be marked as Good→Great→Just. On the contrary, players lose points if they miss an Object. Bonuses are given for a Full Combo (hitting all the Objects) or completing the song with up to 2 misses.[3]

As the players hit Objects with Just timing, the Just Reflec gauge fills up. Once one of the segments has been filled, the player can touch and flick an Object with the Just timing, and it will be reflected at the opponent. A Just Reflec gives bonus points to the user and a greater score penalty if the opponent misses it.

Typically, a song is considered passed if a player achieves 70% overall accuracy on it. Other selectable victory conditions also exist, such as completing the entire song with a life gauge which decreases with missed Objects (similar to Dance Dance Revolution's life bar) or causing a gauge to rise above a certain level by the end of the song (like the Beatmania series' Groove Gauge).

The songs are in 3 different difficulty levels: Easy, Medium, or Hard. In Reflec Beat Limelight, higher difficulty levels will be presented.

The note types are as follows:

Releases[edit]

Arcade[edit]

First generation Reflec Beat machine
REFLEC BEAT limelight machines
REFLEC BEAT colette spring, summer, autumn, and winter machines
REFLEC BEAT colette all seasons machine
REFLEC BEAT groovin'!! machines

The initial release of Reflec Beat was location tested in April and June 2010, with the final release first appearing in arcades in Japan in November 2010, followed by expansion to other countries in Asia in 2011.

In 2011, Reflec Beat Limelight was released,[4] which featured several new songs and refinements to the gameplay.

There was also a change in the grade system. In the system where the score was changed according to the winning and losing and the score at the end after finishing all the games in the early works, the lyme lights reflect the grades of the pure ones only when playing each song. The notation was also changed from D to S1 in green lime 0 to red lime 12. The color of Grade Lime is green - orange - blue - red in order, and the closer to red lime 12, the better.

The biggest change is the change of the top note, the top note is not available, and the normal is the top note in 2-top format as in Reflective, and the top note is randomly displayed in both sides of the top note. The top note has been changed to a three-tier format with three left, center, and right positions, and the top note has been fixed as far as the top note to prevent a certain difficulty from rising. By fixing the position of the top note, we can create more and more diverse chords.

Beginning July 14, 2011, The game will be beatmaniaIIDX 18 Resort Anthem and Reflec beat. BeatmaniaIIDX 19 Lincle was released on September 15, 2011. BeatmaniaIIDX 19 Lincle will be on the event and Reflec beat LimeLight will be available on November 16, 2011 with Reflec Beat LimeLight.[5]

Reflec Beat Colette was released in late 2012, and featured a season motif, with the seasons changing from Winter, to Spring, to Summer, to Autumn throughout 2013. A final "All Seasons" update was later released.

Reflec Beat Groovin'!! was first released in 2014,[6] with an expansion, Groovin'!! Upper, coming months later. These games introduced Vertical Objects, "Special" difficulty mode and song courses.

Reflec Beat Volzza was released in 2015 and introduced Slide Objects. An expansion, Volzza 2, was released in 2016.

Reflec Beat: The Reflesia of Eternity debuted in arcades in December 2016. The theme is RPG. The game was completely overhauled, removing almost every existing song from the song list and recharting the remaining songs. Special difficulty mode was replaced by White Hard, and old songs will return to the game on a regular basis as part of online updates. Systematically, batching speed, big bang and switch objects were added, and slide objects added in voyeur were deleted. Also, since the previous program is not used as it is, the existing data is incompatible and the contents are being renewed to the replicate specification.

iOS[edit]

Reflec Beat plus was released for iOS in 2011, with songs being obtained through purchasable song packs. The game has been gradually updated to match the same functionality as that of the arcade series.

An international version, titled REFLEC BEAT +, has been released. It has a reduced song list which consists only of original songs.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Rifureku Bīto (Japanese: リフレクビート), stylized in all caps and occasionally shortened to RB

References[edit]

  1. ^ John Polson (2012). "Reflec Beat + review". TouchArcade. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  • ^ "How Konami's New Reflec Beat Works". Arcade Heroes. 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  • ^ "Reflec Beat". Apartment 507. 2015. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  • ^ "Monday Variety Post: Reflect (sic) Beat goes Lime; Retro mini-cabs, New Arcade Book". Arcade Heroes. 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  • ^ "Reflec Beat + BeatmaniaIIDX Collabo". 4gamer.net. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  • ^ "News For Allied Tank Attack; Monster Eye; Shining BLADE ARCUS & Reflec Beat Groovin'". Arcade Heroes. 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2016.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Reflec_Beat&oldid=1230393758"

    Categories: 
    Arcade video games
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    IOS games
    Music video games
    Video game franchises introduced in 2010
    Video game franchises
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    Articles containing Japanese-language text
    Articles needing additional references from March 2022
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