

While customization may feel a little bare-bones to some, everything else from its music, to the art direction, to the gameplay is hard to beat. For $30 though, I could see many deciding that the price point is just a bit too high for a rhythm game. What developer PeroPeroGames has been able to do with Muse Dash is remarkable, with such a cheap entry price on PC its hard not to at least give the game a try. If you decide to buy the game on Nintendo Switch however, you’ll only be able to purchase the full game with all current and future DLC included.
#Muse dash all songs upgrade
If you decide to upgrade your purchase and pick up the DLC songs you’ll be paying another $30, but in return you’ll receive all currently released 13 DLC packs, each containing 6 songs each, as well as a new music pack every month. If you decide to pick up the base edition of Muse Dash on PC, you’re going to get an amazing 40 songs out of your $3. You will go through an unprecedented experience of the perfect visual effects of a parkour game and the traditional gameplay of a music game. It really surprised me just how much difficulty can be squeezed out of a fairly basic rhythm game, but I should’ve expected just as much from a Japanese rhythm game. With the rich collection of songs and music, Rhythm game players will find depth and challenges in Muse Dash.

When ramping certain songs up to Master difficulty, especially songs in the Give Up Treatment DLC packs, things get hectic to an extreme. When you first start playing a rhythm game with only 2 rows of notes to hit and only a couple of special notes that are quicker or turn transparent when they reach you, you don’t feel like it could get all that challenging. If you are trying to shoot up the leaderboards though, don’t worry too much about it right away, because while you may crack the top 1000 or so on hard difficulty, the unlockable Master difficulty really brings a challenge that’s hard to see coming.
