"If you're curious, you can look at the Touch Screen... |
The Timing Display (タイミング表示?, Taimingu Hyōji), also called the input-timing display (入力タイミング表示?, Nyūryoku Taimingu Hyōji), is a feature introduced in Rhythm Heaven Megamix meant to help the player practice their timing. It displays the player's accuracy using a set of stars as a visualization on the Touch Screen. It can be turned on or off from the Settings (せってい?, Settei) at the Café.
Timing Names[]
During the explanation in the Introduction, the words (from left to right) Early! (はやい?, Hayai), Perfect! (ジャスト?, Just) and Late! (おそい?, Osoi) are used to describe the timing. The Challenge Train uses Ace! (ジャスト!?, Just!) to indicate a perfect input, and Miss (ミス…?, Miss...) for when the player goes too early, too late, or misses completely. Being a little early or a little late is not indicated. Internally throughout the series, the names just (ジャスト?, jasuto)/success (成功?, seikō), miss (ミス?, misu) and through (スルー?, surū) can also be found.
Each step gives a different amount of points, where getting "Perfect!"/"Ace!" on every single input would result in a 100 score, which although incredibly difficult, is not impossible.
For the purposes of the Rhythm Heaven Wiki, the following is used to describe the timing on Rhythm Game articles:
- Perfect!/Ace!: When the player's timing is perfect or near-perfect.
- Early!/Late!: When the player misses the mark by going too early or too late.
- Miss...: When the player does nothing or does something when they're not supposed to. Depending on the game, performing an action when the player isn't supposed to will either be ignored or considered a miss.
Missing during a Perfect Campaign will end the run, forcing the player to restart for another try. Missing in a game with a lives counter (as in certain Endless Games or during a Lives Goal in Challenge Land) reduces the amount of lives by one.
Skill Star[]
The Skill Star (キメ星?, Kime-boshi) is a collectable in Rhythm Heaven Megamix, serving as an optional challenge for the player. Obtaining a Skill Star requires getting a "Perfect!" input during a crucial moment in a Rhythm Game. Doing an early or late ace input or missing entirely during the run up to the Skill Star will cancel it, meaning the player will need to restart to try again. Getting all Skill Stars is commemorated with a Badge.
Although most Skill Stars are given for a perfect input during a certain part of the game, due to Quiz Show's unique gameplay, its Skill Star is awarded for having "great flow with the rhythm", which is when the contestant follows the host's pattern and scores 90 points or more. Additionally, the Introduction gives the player a go at collecting a Skill Star, but it doesn't count towards anything.
Skill Stars don't appear during the Perfect Campaign nor while riding the Challenge Train.
Bonuses[]
When the player completes a Rhythm Game and sees the Results in Rhythm Heaven Megamix, they can get a Skill Star bonus and a No Miss bonus through self-explanatory means. These bonuses give the player more coins.
If the Skill Star is collected for the first time, it is acknowledged with the message First Skill Star!
Trivia[]
- A similar display appears in Drum Lesson in Rhythm Tengoku known as the "Timing Lamp", which uses five colored lights to indicate how accurate the player's timing is.
- During the 2 Player games in the arcade version of Rhythm Tengoku, the word "Miss" appears to make it clearer which of the two players is mistiming.
- In Rhythm Heaven only, the games Shoot-'Em-Up, Frog Hop, and Lockstep (as well as their arrange versions and in Remixes) do not end a Perfect Campaign if the player inputs too early or too late, but it does negatively affect the rating while not going for a Perfect, still counting as a miss. These exceptions, along with Rhythm Heaven not explicitly defining how timing works, led to a popular misconception that early/late mistimed inputs are counted as a successful input, despite that they are misses by definition.
- Although the timings can be applied to the Rhythm Games in all instalments of the Rhythm Heaven Series, this display only appears in Rhythm Heaven Megamix.
In Other Languages[]
Rhythm Heaven Megamix | |||
---|---|---|---|
Rhythm Games | Earth World | Honeybee Land | |
Machine Land | |||
The First Gate | |||
Citrus Land | |||
Donut Land | |||
The Second Gate | |||
Barbershop Land | |||
Songbird Land | |||
The Third Gate | |||
Lush Woods | Lush Tower | ||
Honeybee Tower | |||
Machine Tower | |||
Citrus Tower | |||
Donut Tower | |||
Barbershop Tower | |||
Songbird Tower | |||
Heaven World | Star Land | ||
Comet Land | |||
Planet Land | |||
The Fourth Gate | |||
Mamarin Palace | Left-Hand Tower | ||
Right-Hand Tower | |||
Tibby's Mom | |||
Shop | Shop No. 1 | ||
Shop No. 2 | |||
Shop No. 3 | |||
Shop No. 4 | |||
Shop No. 5 | |||
Shop No. 6 | |||
Characters | • • • • • • • • • • • • | ||
Miscellaneous | Café • Figure Fighter VS • Stable • Shop • Coins • Flow Ball • Rhythm Item • Play Music • Museum • Badges • Mascots • Memories • Timing Display • Challenge Land • Perfect Campaign • The Rhythm League • Demo • Rhythm Tengoku The Best Plus Comic |