Compare Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Available on PC.

Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition

Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition

Add-on / DLC for Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival — view full game
TBAUnknown
PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €60.84

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€60.849 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€56.36€59.63€62.90€66.176 Jun12 Jun17 Jun23 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 6 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition

I spend most of my time thinking about polling rates and packet loss, so picking up a drum-based rhythm game felt like a detour. What I found was that the timing discipline this series demands is not that different from the headspace you need to hit consistent micro-corrections in a competitive shooter. The core loop is simple on paper: red and blue notes scroll toward a hit marker on the left side of the screen, and you tap the matching inputs. What makes it hard at higher tiers is pure density and speed, the same kind of mechanical ceiling you hit in any competitive game once the basics stop mattering. The PC version, which arrived on Steam in November 2024 after a Switch run since 2022, ships with 76 base songs spanning Anime, VOCALOID, Pop, Classical, Game music, and Namco originals. Highlights include Demon Slayer's Gurenge, Persona 5's Life Will Change, and Evangelion's A Cruel Angel's Thesis. The PC port runs up to 120fps, which for a timing-based game actually matters, and the build is stable. Controls work fine on keyboard or standard controller; if you want the authentic feel, Bandai Namco's own drum controller is compatible and most reviewers agree it changes the experience considerably. Bear in mind the Switch version had Nintendo-licensed tracks that the PC build does not, replaced by other songs including Spy x Family and Monster Hunter medleys. Mode variety is a real selling point. Taiko Mode is the workhorse: solo or two-player versus, online ranked or casual, four difficulty settings from Easy up to Extreme. Great Drum Toy War adds a competitive twist where good drumming spawns toys on a shared battlefield and skills can litter your opponent's lane with false notes - more strategic than it sounds, and it supports online matchmaking. Don-chan Band is a four-player co-op mode where each player owns a separate instrument line within the same song, with shared notes that force coordination. Run! Ninja Dojo is a racing variant where accuracy translates to movement speed. Improvement Support lets you drill individual song sections at reduced speed, which is the right call for anyone serious about clearing Extreme charts. The loudest ongoing complaint is the monetisation structure. The base game's 76 songs are playable and varied, but the Taiko Music Pass subscription unlocks over 700 additional tracks. Some songs rotate out of the pass over time, which has made a portion of the community uneasy about long-term value. Individual DLC packs are also available at launch, and critics have noted it feels uncomfortable to see substantial paid content on day one. Online play has drawn occasional reports of timing inconsistency, which for a game where every millisecond of latency counts is worth flagging. If clean netcode for ranked play is a hard requirement, go in with tempered expectations. For a shooter-focused player, the honest pitch is this: the precision floor is lower than ranked FPS but the ceiling for mastery is real, the multiplayer modes are genuinely fun in a local party setting, and the PC port is clean. The subscription model and the J-pop-heavy tracklist are legitimate filters. If neither of those bothers you, the core mechanics have held up for over two decades for a reason.

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedneeds-eneba-scrape

System Requirements

System requirements for Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Unknown
Publisher
Unknown
Release Date
TBA

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition

How much does Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition cost?

Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition cheapest?

Compare Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition available on?

Taiko no Tatsujin: Rhythm Festival The Setlist Edition is available on PC.