Turn the Beat Around: RevivingDance Dance Revolution After 25 Years
All photos courtesy of Getty
By 2006, Dance Dance Revolution was a known quantity in North America.
That year, it was a central gag in Nicholaus Goossen’s stoner comedy Grandma’s Boy. The film wasn’t a major theatrical success, but it did garner a significant enough cult audience for some gags to become shorthand knowledge among a specific age group. The DDR showdown is one such scene.
But this is just one example. Series like Gilmore Girls and The Simpsons and films like The Yes Man and Scott Pilgrim are how a majority of Americans were exposed to Dance Dance Revolution. Typically, the game was seen as a novelty or joke in the context of mass culture. One need only see Gabriel Iglesias’ routine on the game from his 2009 special, I’m Not Fat, I’m Fluffy, to get a bead on that reputation.
For people who forged friendships and built reputations around the games, however, Dance Dance Revolution was anything but a punchline.
Filmmaker and actor Jason Trost was one such person. Raised in a “racist, misogynistic town,” Trost and best friend Lee Valmassy found solace on their local cabinet. In an adolescence often marred by ableist bullying directed at his visual impairment, the rhythm game offered something school sports couldn’t: belonging.
“Lee and I knew each other since 6th or 7th grade, I think,” Trost told me via email. “We got along over the years because we liked the same nerdy games, the same ridiculous movies, and we both had pretty strong opinions on the world around us. Lee and I both found DDR separately from each other and it just kind of became something we could both bond over when hanging out at each other’s houses deep in the mountains in the middle of nowhere.”
Trost wasn’t alone in this. At the time, Dance Dance Revolution offered physical participation in something other than jingoistic American school sports. This was crucial during a time when post-Iraq patriotism was in full swing, as it offered an almost counter-culture type of sport that wasn’t, say, Ultimate.
“I started playing at age 9 when Dance Dance Revolution 3rd MIX cabinets started to become imported to the United States,” says longtime Bemani player and collector Mickey Damiano.
Damiano was exposed to the series through channels like G4, then found a cabinet at his local mall. Since then, he’s become a staple fixture in the Bemani community through his continued involvement in both the US and Japan. He emailed me from Japan, on his second trip to play Konami’s Dancerush Stardom with the local community.
In the years since both Trost and Damiano have entered the space, DDR’s cultural star has waned to some extent. While it still has an almost household name brand recognition, it’s far from the popular home gaming pick it once was. Damiano is aware of this.
“It isn’t 2003 anymore,” he told me. “I remember when VH1’s I Love The 2000s featured DDR as just a trend in 2003. That being said, DDR’s popularity has always expanded and contracted […] DDR is no longer the game that you and your general nerd friends stomp on arrows to when at the mall because it is the cool and nerdy thing to do. In North America, at least, it is now the game that you play seriously.
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