DJMax Portable 3

DJMAX Portable 3

DJMax Portable 3 North American cover art
Developer(s) Pentavision
Publisher(s)

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  • NA: PM Studios

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  • JP: CyberFront
Director(s) Bexter
Planetboom (Sound Director)
Producer(s) Croove
Platform(s) PlayStation Portable
Release date(s)

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  • SK: 14 October 2010

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  • NA: 14 October 2010

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  • PSN: 19 October 2010

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  • JP: 17 February 2011
Genre(s) Music video game
Mode(s) Single-player Multiplayer

DJMax Portable 3 (Korean: 디제이맥스 포터블 3; abbr.: DMP3) is a music game for the PlayStation Portable published and developed by Pentavision in South Korea, and is a sequel to the earlier DJMax Portable games.[1][2][3] DJMax Portable 3 was announced shortly after DJMax Technika 2 was announced. The official trailers from PM Studios and Pentavision quickly followed.[4] It is the seventh installment of the game for the PlayStation Portable, and regarded as the actual sequel to DJMax Portable 2 since Clazziquai and Black Square branched out for the METRO Project in 2008, Fever for the North American release and the Technika series globally.

New Features

Announcement

PM Studios officially announced on 25 May 2010 that the game would be released in North America, and that they were aiming for a North American release within October 2010.[1] The game will be released in both UMD and PlayStation Network Digital Download format. It is to feature more than 30 songs, various modes and options, and an unannounced new feature (which was later confirmed as the X.2T modes).[3] There will be two different limited editions (one for the USA and the other one for Korea) which includes various extras like artbooks and the original soundtrack to the game. Both of them are strictly limited to 1000 pieces. The single UMD would be limited to 6000 discs in the US. The limited edition for the US version were sold exclusively on Bemanistyle.

Songs

Playable Music

Background Music

Cameoed Music

In Remix Mode, samples from other songs were played. Here is the list of sampled music from other titles of the DJMAX series.

Reception

Greg Miller of IGN ranked DJ Max Portable 3 a 7 out of 10 stating: "I never found myself drawn to come back to DJ Max Portable 3; the stuff it bumbles makes the gameplay seem less cool. The long loads, the super-familiar setup and the awkward nature of the options and menus just didn't work for me this time around."[6]

References

External links

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