Compare DanceWall Remix prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Extreme Reality. Published by Plug In Digital. Released on 8/27/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Sport, Single Player, Side View, Indie.

A webcam-powered rhythm game where your whole body is the controller. Strike poses, dodge obstacles, and collect gems across three themed stages - no Kinect required.

DanceWall Remix is a motion-controlled rhythm and pose-matching game from developer Extreme Reality that turns an ordinary PC webcam into a full-body controller. The premise is simple and honestly kind of charming: silhouetted shapes barrel toward you on a side-scrolling wall, and you physically contort your body to match them, slip through the gaps, grab gems, and knock away obstacles. No console, no depth sensor, no Wii remote - just you, your laptop camera, and however much floor space you can clear. The game splits across three themed modes - Disco, Classic, and Retro. Disco leans into a 70s nightclub aesthetic with funky, era-appropriate music. Classic goes full bubblegum-pop, drenching everything in candy colors and bright, playful energy. Retro channels an 8-bit synthetic electronica world. Each mode carries four difficulty stages, and all twelve stages together clock in at roughly an hour of play. There is also a two-player option, so you and another person can dance alongside or compete against each other in front of the same camera. The soundtrack is original and genuinely catchy in moments - there is a little lightness in the composition that suits the silliness of the gameplay well. At the end of each stage, the game surfaces snapshots it captured of you mid-pose, and that alone has produced some legitimately funny moments. Here is the honest part, though. The motion-tracking technology, Extreme Reality's own "Extreme Motion" software, is doing a lot of heavy lifting for a 2D webcam and it shows. Your on-screen silhouette trembles, the pose-matching detection is loose, and the game compensates for tracking inconsistency by being extremely forgiving about what counts as a correct match. Whether that reads as "accessible" or "pointless" will depend entirely on what you come to it wanting. If you want a rhythm game that rewards precision and builds skill over time, this is not that. The skill ceiling is almost nonexistent, and dedicated players will find the content exhausted well inside an hour. Where DanceWall Remix does work is as a completely unpretentious party object. You pull it up, you hand whoever is nearest your keyboard, and you watch them flail at the camera while music plays. For that specific context - a group of people, low stakes, short bursts - it delivers exactly what it promises. It found a brief moment of wider attention when it was played by popular streamers shortly after launch, and that spirit of communal, laugh-first play is genuinely baked into the design. It is not a game you sit with quietly for 40 hours. It is a game you play twice in one evening and remember fondly for a specific reason. If you are a solo player hoping for a rhythm experience with depth, look elsewhere. If you want something absurd and physical that works without any special hardware, and you approach it at exactly the right temperature, DanceWall Remix has a small, weird, honest appeal that the genre mostly forgot to keep. Kai, Scout Team

DanceWall Remix
SportSingle PlayerSide ViewIndie

DanceWall Remix

Aug 27, 2014Extreme RealityPlug In Digital
GamerScout Says

A webcam-powered rhythm game where your whole body is the controller. Strike poses, dodge obstacles, and collect gems across three themed stages - no Kinect required.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About DanceWall Remix

DanceWall Remix is a motion-controlled rhythm and pose-matching game from developer Extreme Reality that turns an ordinary PC webcam into a full-body controller. The premise is simple and honestly kind of charming: silhouetted shapes barrel toward you on a side-scrolling wall, and you physically contort your body to match them, slip through the gaps, grab gems, and knock away obstacles. No console, no depth sensor, no Wii remote - just you, your laptop camera, and however much floor space you can clear. The game splits across three themed modes - Disco, Classic, and Retro. Disco leans into a 70s nightclub aesthetic with funky, era-appropriate music. Classic goes full bubblegum-pop, drenching everything in candy colors and bright, playful energy. Retro channels an 8-bit synthetic electronica world. Each mode carries four difficulty stages, and all twelve stages together clock in at roughly an hour of play. There is also a two-player option, so you and another person can dance alongside or compete against each other in front of the same camera. The soundtrack is original and genuinely catchy in moments - there is a little lightness in the composition that suits the silliness of the gameplay well. At the end of each stage, the game surfaces snapshots it captured of you mid-pose, and that alone has produced some legitimately funny moments. Here is the honest part, though. The motion-tracking technology, Extreme Reality's own "Extreme Motion" software, is doing a lot of heavy lifting for a 2D webcam and it shows. Your on-screen silhouette trembles, the pose-matching detection is loose, and the game compensates for tracking inconsistency by being extremely forgiving about what counts as a correct match. Whether that reads as "accessible" or "pointless" will depend entirely on what you come to it wanting. If you want a rhythm game that rewards precision and builds skill over time, this is not that. The skill ceiling is almost nonexistent, and dedicated players will find the content exhausted well inside an hour. Where DanceWall Remix does work is as a completely unpretentious party object. You pull it up, you hand whoever is nearest your keyboard, and you watch them flail at the camera while music plays. For that specific context - a group of people, low stakes, short bursts - it delivers exactly what it promises. It found a brief moment of wider attention when it was played by popular streamers shortly after launch, and that spirit of communal, laugh-first play is genuinely baked into the design. It is not a game you sit with quietly for 40 hours. It is a game you play twice in one evening and remember fondly for a specific reason. If you are a solo player hoping for a rhythm experience with depth, look elsewhere. If you want something absurd and physical that works without any special hardware, and you approach it at exactly the right temperature, DanceWall Remix has a small, weird, honest appeal that the genre mostly forgot to keep. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamWebcam RequiredMotion ControlPose MatchingParty GameRhythmTwo-Player LocalArcade Score AttackShort Playtime

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
600 MB
Processor
Intel Pentium Celeron
System requirements
Windows 7

Recommended

Memory
2 GB RAM
Processor
Intel Core i3
System requirements
Windows 7

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Extreme Reality
Publisher
Plug In Digital
Release Date
Aug 27, 2014

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