Compare TAPSONIC BOLD prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by NEOWIZ. Published by NEOWIZ. Released on 3/29/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Racing.

Neowiz's DJMax pedigree shows in every note chart here. Tight lane-based action, 87 tracks, and a clever lane-flip mechanic make this one of the better rhythm games on PC - if you can live without online multiplayer.

My first few minutes with TAPSONIC BOLD felt instantly familiar in the best way. The team behind this is the same crew responsible for the DJMax series, and that experience bleeds through in how well the note charts sync to the music. This is a lane-based keyboard rhythm game at its core: notes scroll down toward a target line and you hit the matching keys in time. The default setup maps to S, D, F, J, K, and L - comfortable for most keyboards - and you can rebind anything to suit your own style, which is a small but meaningful touch. The standout mechanic is the lane-flip system. Hit an arrow-shaped double note and the playfield reshapes around you, splitting and changing the number of active lanes mid-song. When it works, it adds a genuine jolt of chaos that separates this from a basic BMS clone. The flip feels a little rough around the edges in a handful of charts, particularly at harder difficulties, but it rarely feels cheap - mostly it just demands that you stay alert. There are also slide notes carried over from the mobile version, which act as shifting hold notes where you swap keys mid-hold. Reviewers have pointed out they feel a bit redundant against standard stacked hold-and-tap combinations, and honestly that criticism holds up. They are not broken, just a little awkward. The tracklist is the real selling point. You are looking at over 80 tracks spanning trance, acid jazz, hard rock, K-pop, anisong, and electronic, pulling from DJMax's back catalogue, original Tapsonic mobile titles, O2Jam roots, and Steam-exclusive originals. Across five difficulty tiers - Easy, Normal, Hard, Expert, and occasional Challenge charts - there is enough range that new players can find their footing on Easy while series veterans can chase full-combo runs on Expert without hitting a ceiling too soon. The Mission mode adds objective-based targets on top of standard play, giving achievement hunters a reason to revisit songs beyond personal bests. Where it falls short is presentation and multiplayer. The UI is functional but clearly ported straight from mobile: songs scroll in a single horizontal row that becomes annoying to browse at 80-plus tracks, and in-game options like speed adjustment are shown as on-screen boxes despite being keyboard-controlled. It all works fine, but it reads as a UI that never got its PC redesign pass. More importantly for anyone hoping to rope in friends, there is no online multiplayer at all. For a keyboard rhythm game in 2019 that is a real gap, and the situation has not changed since launch. The game is also not Steam Deck verified, so your handheld options are limited. One more flag worth raising: community posts from 2023 onward suggest Neowiz has largely stopped actively updating Bold, so do not bank on new content drops. For the DJMax-curious player who finds Respect's DLC costs steep, or for anyone who wants a clean, no-subscription rhythm game with a generous base tracklist and satisfying chart design, TAPSONIC BOLD delivers where it counts. Just go in knowing it is a solo experience with a slightly clunky UI, and that it is unlikely to grow further. Riley, Scout Team

TAPSONIC BOLD
ActionCasualRacing

TAPSONIC BOLD

Mar 29, 2019NEOWIZ
GamerScout Says

Neowiz's DJMax pedigree shows in every note chart here. Tight lane-based action, 87 tracks, and a clever lane-flip mechanic make this one of the better rhythm games on PC - if you can live without online multiplayer.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About TAPSONIC BOLD

My first few minutes with TAPSONIC BOLD felt instantly familiar in the best way. The team behind this is the same crew responsible for the DJMax series, and that experience bleeds through in how well the note charts sync to the music. This is a lane-based keyboard rhythm game at its core: notes scroll down toward a target line and you hit the matching keys in time. The default setup maps to S, D, F, J, K, and L - comfortable for most keyboards - and you can rebind anything to suit your own style, which is a small but meaningful touch. The standout mechanic is the lane-flip system. Hit an arrow-shaped double note and the playfield reshapes around you, splitting and changing the number of active lanes mid-song. When it works, it adds a genuine jolt of chaos that separates this from a basic BMS clone. The flip feels a little rough around the edges in a handful of charts, particularly at harder difficulties, but it rarely feels cheap - mostly it just demands that you stay alert. There are also slide notes carried over from the mobile version, which act as shifting hold notes where you swap keys mid-hold. Reviewers have pointed out they feel a bit redundant against standard stacked hold-and-tap combinations, and honestly that criticism holds up. They are not broken, just a little awkward. The tracklist is the real selling point. You are looking at over 80 tracks spanning trance, acid jazz, hard rock, K-pop, anisong, and electronic, pulling from DJMax's back catalogue, original Tapsonic mobile titles, O2Jam roots, and Steam-exclusive originals. Across five difficulty tiers - Easy, Normal, Hard, Expert, and occasional Challenge charts - there is enough range that new players can find their footing on Easy while series veterans can chase full-combo runs on Expert without hitting a ceiling too soon. The Mission mode adds objective-based targets on top of standard play, giving achievement hunters a reason to revisit songs beyond personal bests. Where it falls short is presentation and multiplayer. The UI is functional but clearly ported straight from mobile: songs scroll in a single horizontal row that becomes annoying to browse at 80-plus tracks, and in-game options like speed adjustment are shown as on-screen boxes despite being keyboard-controlled. It all works fine, but it reads as a UI that never got its PC redesign pass. More importantly for anyone hoping to rope in friends, there is no online multiplayer at all. For a keyboard rhythm game in 2019 that is a real gap, and the situation has not changed since launch. The game is also not Steam Deck verified, so your handheld options are limited. One more flag worth raising: community posts from 2023 onward suggest Neowiz has largely stopped actively updating Bold, so do not bank on new content drops. For the DJMax-curious player who finds Respect's DLC costs steep, or for anyone who wants a clean, no-subscription rhythm game with a generous base tracklist and satisfying chart design, TAPSONIC BOLD delivers where it counts. Just go in knowing it is a solo experience with a slightly clunky UI, and that it is unlikely to grow further. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:aaaRhythm GameLane-BasedKeyboard ControlsDJMax-AdjacentNote ChartsMission ModeSolo FocusHigh Skill CeilingMobile Port

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7, 8.1, 10 (64bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 700 Series or AMD RX200 Series
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 3.0GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 6000+ 3.0GHz
Sound Card
DirectX 11 Compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 (64bit)
DirectX
Version 12
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
10 GB available space

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Game Info

Developer
NEOWIZ
Publisher
NEOWIZ
Release Date
Mar 29, 2019

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2026-06-1016.50(lowest)

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What platforms is TAPSONIC BOLD available on?

TAPSONIC BOLD is available on PC.

When was TAPSONIC BOLD released?

TAPSONIC BOLD was released on 29 March 2019.

Who developed TAPSONIC BOLD?

TAPSONIC BOLD was developed by NEOWIZ.