
The problem is that those DLC tracks come in at about $Aus6 for each “pack” of three, so to get everything you’re looking at an outlay of $Aus130. Grab everything that Miku Flick/02 has around 75 tracks. That might not sound like much – and it isn’t – so the good news is that there are another 63 tracks available for download.
#Miku flick 2 packs download#
The base download costs about $Aus10, and comes with about a dozen tracks.

But none of that is possible with Miku Flick/02, and from a purely fan service point of view, that’s actually quite disappointing. I also liked playing around with the costumes they would wear in the tracks. I do this because MEIKO music tracks – and specifically Nostalogic and Change Me – are so completely sexy and, well, yeah. One of my favourite little hobbies within Project Diva f games was sticking Hatsune Miku in MEIKO music tracks. Each track has a specific video that plays in the background, and that video has a specific costume and character associated with it.

In the other Miku games you simply tap buttons (or the touch screen, in the case of Project Mirai) in time with the music.

The rhythm game action is so, so good.I know that’s a big call, but there are a couple of reasons for this: It has immediately become my favourite Hatsune Miku game. But let’s make up for that by talking about it now. A proper, bona fide Miku rhythm game that I could have been playing for three years now, and I’ve only just discovered it now. Spoiler alert: he kinda enjoyed it.Īctually, perhaps that’s why I didn’t bother searching for Miku stuff on the App Store before I assumed that the games weren’t being localised, and that the only stuff I would find would be painfully bad unlicensed fan nonsense.īut then I was flicking through the rhythm game charts and Miku Flick/02 was there (impressive, really, that it’s still charting given it was originally released in 2012). Related reading: Matt’s experience at a Hatsune Miku live concert. I knew that there is a Miku free-to-play RPG over in Japan, because I played it at Tokyo Game Show two years ago, and my wife likes to rub it in my face that she’s playing the game now while I’m assuming it will never be localised for the west (it’s good). If you'd like to see which songs are unlocked upon clearing a song, see the Unlockables page.For whatever reason (and I really have no idea why), I never thought to check the iOS App Store for Hatsune Miku games.
#Miku flick 2 packs ps3#
The PS Vita version of Project Diva F contains 32 songs while the PS3 version contains 39. They can be played on Easy or Normal Difficulty only, and your progress will not be saved. The Demo for Hatsune Miku Project Diva F contains three songs. Basically, the higher the BPM, the faster the song. If you wish to unlock the song at a higher difficulty, you must first clear the same song with a standard grade or higher on the previous difficulty.īPM stands for Beats Per Minute. To unlock more songs on Project Diva F, you must clear a song with a standard grade or higher.
