[This message has been copypasted from http://nes.greatstreamingvideo.com/ and has been written by jsb, the person who has played awesome records in a dancing game called Dance Dance Revolution.] jsb wrote: Excuse me, I'm the person in the video that was linked a page back, and I think perhaps you should let the people that play this game competitively inform you of what is going on before you try to act like you have any idea. First of all, remembering the steps to a song is ridiculous. It's hard for most, impossible for many, and provides little in the way of advantage in an upper-tier tournament. Why? Because frankly when you've reached a level of skill that would put you in the top 10 nationally, you have the capability to read arrows and react extremely fast without much problem. The biggest challenge is hitting each arrow within a mere 15 ms of the exact point that the game thinks you should hit them. It requires rhythm, and percision in the form of muscle retraction. Don't mistake me, I'm not advocating this game is difficult. To the contrary. I actually believe this is one of the easiest games in the world (I became supposedly one of the "best" players in the country by playing maybe once or twice a month). However, what you said is incorrect and I feel it only fair to those who actually play or like this game (I quit after that nationals tournament mentioned in November because I no longer saw the same profitability in the game that I experienced last year) to at least correct you so the many who have no idea what this game is about don't actually believe the gibberish you're spewing. Please don't take this as a flame; I realize it might come off as offensive, but to be fair having to read that I "play all day" so I can "remember" the steps and that no skill is involved is fairly offensive to me, because it makes it sound like I am a typical video game nerd, which I'm not. I am quite bad at video games actually. That's not the point though. I hope you understand what I've said and will take it into consideration in the future when you feel like badmouthing a game or a group of people you clearly know little or nothing about.