Each song has its own routine, and they’re all marked in terms of how challenging they are to perform. The gameplay itself is as addictive and familiar as ever – you still follow the dancers on screen in your best attempts at copying their routine.
#Just dance 2020 or 2021 license
I’m assuming this is a license thing, but when so many karaoke games feature classic tracks with their original artists it stands out when Just Dance does not. “In The Navy” should be by the Village People and not by the Sunlight Shakers, and The Girly Team isn’t Britney Spears. Even though I generally prefer them, having fewer classics on the tracklist isn’t too big of an issue, but the fact that a lot of them aren’t the original recordings doesn’t help. This year’s edition veers more towards this year’s hits than Just Dance 2020 did, with over half of the game’s 40 tracks being less than two years old.
One thing I immediately look for with every Just Dance release is the tracklist – which has consistently been a mix of older and newer songs. The latter may seem like a weird comment, but party games (and I consider Just Dance to be one) and 2020 aren’t a great combination. I wasn’t expecting any big innovations in gameplay, so I was curious to see how the new edition was going to turn out and how it was going to hold up in 2020. Last year was a bit of an anniversary release for the franchise, with some of the most popular tracks from its first 10 years included in a fun trip down memory lane. This is the first time the game is coming out for next gen systems as well, but we’re taking a look on a PS4. Alongside the likes of FIFA and Call of Duty, one of the staple videogame releases for November is a new entry in the Just Dance franchise, and Just Dance 2021 delivers exactly that.