Now this is the piece which makes the set cost an arm and a leg. They both have a yellow button on them for menu hopping, but shaking is what these babies are all about. To my surprise they even have a rattle in them, which you can remove with a screwdriver if you wish, and replace in-game with SFX, of which there are loads to unlock. The bright red maracas are the first thing you see upon opening the box. All nicely bubble wrapped it was, and everything is pristine, which is nice. Open the box up and all this stuff is found inside. I certainly won't be stuffing this in the loft in a hurry. Unlike most of the Dreamcast boxes which are a minimalist (but still rather cool) blue with huge white text, this box has the characters plastered all over the front and really looks something up on your shelf. The game itself is, as expected, a real blast and makes the DDR games and it's mat look rather old-hat (although the mat and Space Channel 5 is still a brilliant combination) but rather then just state the obvious with a review and screenshots, I'm going to give you a full run down of what exactly you get in the box.įirst thing you notice is the beautiful artwork on the box itself. The previous owner of the game had only played it a couple times, so everything was in next to perfect condition. After days of bouncing off the walls since I forked out £75 for it, the Samba De Amigo box set arrived this morning, and what a wonderful box set it is.
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