You must swpie (or “flick”) in the direction of the proper character that corresponds to the lyrics highlighted on top, and it must be timed just when the lyric reaches the cursor on the left. Pressing a button will reveal a “flower” layout of four characters related to the main letter of that button. The reason for this is that you play to the beat of the song lyrics, which scroll just right above the keypad. Original (Hiragana), Romaji (Hiragana with its Romaji equivalent), or English (which is actually just Romaji only). The main game interface consists of a 10-button keypad-style layout with letters on it, which can be changed in three ways. The Flick games take a different route from the Diva series in terms of the gameplay, which is more fitting for a mobile platform. This version, released 4 months later, gives more variety with songs from Megurine Luka and the Kagamine twins Rin and Len. It featured 13 songs all sung by Miku from Project Diva which came out on the PSP. The first Miku Flick was released March 9 of last year (which interestingly is a play on Miku’s name the numbers 3 and 9 can be read as Mi and Ku). Her prescence alone warrants a look at this game, but can it stand up to the likes of its predecessors in the Project Diva line? From Sega and Crypton Future Media comes Miku Flick 02, an iOS music game based on the popular Vocaloid franchise featuring the well-loved Hatsune Miku.
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