It has long been a theory that anything can be improved with choreographed dance routines. The people at Sega are champions of this cause. Rhythm Thief & The Emperor's Treasure, Sega’s new foray into the world of funk, is a vastly fun musical adventure around the streets of Paris, mixing several rhythm-action minigames with few light point-and-click adventuring.

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The experience reveals in true elaborate Broadway style as idol Phantom R meets you with a dance-off. After a brief release, you are immediately hitting, using, and circling the touchscreen technology in time to a troupe of performers on the higher display. Single-screen guidelines appear before this minigame, eliminating any buffer to getting began. It is hard not to fall madly in love with a activity title that starts with you prancing your products on top of the Arc de Triomphe.


Then the tale gets going. Phantom R, actual name Raphael, is Paris' most desired criminal. With police hot on his pathway, he smashes into art exhibits, taking their invaluable gifts and usually creating a deceive of Paris' most extremely put investigator. He alerts the law first, of course. Phantom R is all all about vision. After all, you can not have a dance-off without an viewers. It soon becomes obvious that there is a little more to Phantom R's conduct than rather villainy, however.


It is all very absurd and over the top, and this solutions completely with the design of the several minigames on provide. You would not just be using in dance-offs. There is a lot of wide range, from rhythmically coming behind sculptures and hitting the corresponding shaded option to the defeat, to preparing spinach and beef in a chance to songs. There are platforming sections, as if Cameo met Canabalt, where you tap the experience control buttons to springtime from outlined areas.