Playing Just Dance Through YouTube Is A Great Way To Make New Friends

Like many good things, Just Dance’s continued presence in my life started as a comedic bit—one born from a conversation in my college freshman dorm in 2019 that, after a few twists and turns, got carried away into hours of flailing limbs and unstoppable laughter. Then, Just Dance briefly reappeared in my life while I was trying to find new exercises during the 2020 lockdown and remembered how sweaty the game could leave me after a few songs. Post-lockdown, Just Dance would rear its head again as boredom developed inside a computer lab one night transformed into a chorus of voices choosing the next song we’d all dance to. Eventually, I realized Just Dance had more staying power than I first thought when it took up the entire evening at a house party during my first year out of college—and that power was helping build meaningful connections.
Somehow, without intention or planning, Just Dance had become one of the best ways of making friends during my late teens and early twenties. I would’ve laughed in someone’s face had they told me this when I graduated high school in 2018. Just Dance hadn’t been relevant in my life—past being an interesting look into what Ubisoft considered the hot songs of yesteryear—since my family gave our Nintendo Wii away. I never felt a strong desire to buy the Switch editions of Just Dance because the complete tracklists weren’t particularly enticing. And despite the super-vibrant, hip-shaking game creating some fun evenings for my family, we had collectively begun to sour on it due to how finicky we perceived the scoring system to be. In 2018, the game had comfortably found its place on my mental shelf of Fun Things That Can Now Be Laid To Rest.
But years of engaging in impromptu group choreography is forcing me to concede that Just Dance may be more helpful than ever in making friends. In case you’ve never played the game or could use a refresher, Just Dance has players match the choreography of in-game dancers along to the beats and lyrics of popular songs. While the game is most often played with movement-sensing controls like Wii Remotes, Switch Joy-Cons, or VR controllers, in actuality the only thing you need to participate is your body and an ability to follow directions. With that in mind, playing Just Dance actually has a fairly low-barrier to entry when you remember that people love making playthroughs of anything on YouTube, including dance games. From there, looking up “Hot n Cold,” “Jump On It,” “Let’s Groove,” or “Rasputin” and shaking some ass with nearby folks is just a matter of knowledge and willingness.
If you’re wondering why do this rather than, you know, just turn on any given playlist and turn up the speakers, I’d say don’t underestimate the relief in following an instructor. There’s a reason that no matter how a dance floor starts, it gains numbers when songs with instructions like the “Cha Cha Slide” flood ears. It helps that they’re catchy and increasingly nostalgic, but what sells them is that everyone is told what to do. Instructional songs, and Just Dance fundamentally, remove the most awkward part of dancing (and sometimes, conversation): coming up with your own moves. People can recommend any number of old reliables like the simple two-step, or even just jumping and down if it fits the song, but those recommendations don’t necessarily address the core discomfort in being perceived while dancing. With Just Dance, you’re dancing, but you’re equally playing a game.