DJMAX RESPECT V
DJMAX RESPECT V is a deep, high-ceiling PC rhythm game with hundreds of licensed tracks, slick music videos, and online multiplayer that punishes button-mashers in the best way.
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About DJMAX RESPECT V
DJMAX RESPECT V is a button-lane rhythm game from NEOWIZ, the Korean studio that built the DJMAX franchise into one of the most respected names in the genre. Released on PC in March 2020, it functions like a greatest-hits package crossed with a live-service platform: a base library of original DJMAX tracks is stacked high, and years of DLC packs have added collaborations with artists like Marshmello, Porter Robinson, and Yukika, alongside crossover packs pulling from titles like Cytus, Touhou, and Guilty Gear. If you have a hunger for catalog depth, this is the game that will feed it for a very long time. The core mechanics revolve around note lanes, and here DJMAX gives you real options. You can play in 4B, 5B, 6B, or 8B modes (button counts, essentially), each of which reads and rewards differently. Eight-button mode is its own skill tree almost entirely separate from four-button play, so veteran rhythm gamers will find a genuine learning curve no matter where they come in. Difficulty is calibrated across multiple tiers from beginner-accessible charts all the way to charts that will humble players who think Dance Dance Revolution prepared them for anything. The note highway is clean, latency calibration tools are present and functional, and the visual feedback is satisfying without being cluttered. The music video backdrops running in full HD during play are a genuine production value win, not just filler. Online multiplayer is available and works, though the matchmaking pool outside peak hours can feel thin depending on your region. The more durable competitive layer is the score-chasing and leaderboard system, which is where players actually spend the bulk of their time. Grinding for S-rank on a difficult 8B chart is the kind of low-key obsessive loop that this genre thrives on. The DLC model is the one significant pain point: the base game gets you a solid chunk of content, but the full catalog requires purchasing individual packs, and costs accumulate fast if you want everything. The pricing structure is worth reading before you commit. For strategy and sim players who are curious but unfamiliar with the rhythm genre, DJMAX Respect V is one of the more approachable entry points despite its competitive ceiling. The lower-difficulty charts are genuinely manageable, the UI communicates what is happening without demanding genre literacy, and there is a free play structure that lets you sample widely before investing in harder content. You are not locked into a tutorial gauntlet. Think of it like a grand strategy game where you can set the AI to easy and explore the systems without being immediately crushed. The depth is there when you want it, dormant when you do not. At 89 percent positive across more than 34,000 Steam reviews, the community verdict is consistent and sustained over multiple years, which in a live-service title signals that the updates have landed well. If your music taste aligns with the catalog (electronic, K-pop adjacent, some rock and jazz), you will find the hours disappearing. If you have no interest in score optimization and competitive self-improvement loops, the game will run out of things to offer you faster than the library size implies. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- NEOWIZ
- Publisher
- NEOWIZ
- Release Date
- Mar 11, 2020