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Get On Da Mic | 
enlarge | From: Eidos Interactive Category: Video Games
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $0.01 You Save: $39.98 (100%)
New (12) Used (14) from $0.01
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 15046
Platform: Playstation2 Genre: Adventure Games ESRB: Teen Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Age: 12 - 20 years Operating System: Playstation 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 50038 Model: P2EIDO 788687500388 UPC: 788687500388 EAN: 0788687500388 ASIN: B000639L7O
Release Date: October 10, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | ESRB Rating; T (teen) | | • | Family |
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Product Description Get On Da Mic is the world's first real hip-hop simulation. Set the trends in the urban areas and rap your way to the top, while living the life of a hip-hop superstar. The game allows rappers with any amount of skills to get a taste of the big time, as they rap along with 40 hip-hop classics from yesterday, today and tomorrow. If you just want to do the karaoke thing hip-hop style, jump into Party Mode and get your own flow going
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| Customer Reviews:
thumbs down... February 8, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This game is by far the worst rendition of Karaoke that I have ever come across. The is no reason to do anythign but tap the microphone to earn points. It is truly a waist of time and money!!
Its a game and its fun. January 15, 2007 I'm not a big fan of rap one bit. I bought this game for my brother who loves rap. It may not be a rappers dream but I found myself enjoying it. This is nowhere near like the other type of karaoke type games. There is no "pitch" screen. Just 2 lines of text that has a moving bar.
From a completely technical side of this game, the lines that move irritate the heck out of me. One line can go ever so slow and the next fly by so fast you miss the words. It is a little irritating from that aspect.
My brother kept complaining that some of the words were not the original and they blank out all "politically incorrect" phrases with #. I hate when games censor content like that. Also he mentioned that the people doing the rapping on the game were definately not the original rappers. Looks like the game developers cut a corner on expenses with the rapping.
Overall, this will be fun for ages 10+ who really dont care about "getting it right" and just want to have fun rapping. This is definately not a teaching aid to become a rapper. Get this for the fun and fan not for the accuracy or realism.
This also used my microphone I had for Karaoke Revolution which was a big plus.
Shoddy but Entertaining. January 9, 2005 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Listen, the faults with this game are obvious. The scoring reflects relatively little on the competency of the player, and the "game" elements are poorly integrated if not downright pointless. Sure, you can't actually //go into// the mansion you buy or fly that private jet, and, yes, you're going to score better if you just hum or go "ba ba ba" in time with the music. But why do that when you can suspend disbelief a little bit and have some fun with it?
For a karaoke game, I feel the selection comes up with a pretty adequate cross-section of mainstream hip-hop (though missy elliott is curiously overrepresented--not that the fact draws any complaints from myself). When it comes down to it, this is a product for karaoke fans. not for die-hard game fans (who will, i'm certain tire of it within the first two plays) or even die-hard hip-hops fans (who will probably find the scoring to be inadequate and likely infuriating). But for people who like to have a good time looking dumb in front of their friends as they stumble through popular songs (or look even dumber trying to come up with their own rhymes to some corny canned beats) it's great.
so sure. know what you're getting into, but it doesn't cost that much (Assuming you already have the mic/headset), and if you're into karaoke, you'll get some good times out of it.
This Game Broke My Heart and Wallet October 7, 2004 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
The idea of rapping along with famous people appealed to me since I first heard of this game. Now that I've bought it I'm feeling buyer's remorse to the max. I like rap as much as the next guy, but after 2 and a half hours I have seen everything this game has to offer. The microphone can't actually understand the words you're saying, and you can actually get higher scores by mumbling than by actually learning the song. THIS DEFEATS THE ENTIRE PURPOSE OF THE GAME. The game also advertises that you can buy cars, a mansion, a helicopter and a yacht. These have no bearing on the gameplay, but are merely tiny still pictures that appear behind your character on the character select screen.There are 40 songs and here's the list: Get Busy, Ante Up (Remix), Get By, Baby Got Back, Beware of the Boyz, Dude, Ma I Don't Love Her, The Jump Off, Posse On Broadway, Hey Mama, Tipsy, Get Ur Freak On, Rappers Delight, Wit Dre Day, Pass That Dutch, Humpty Dance, California Love Remix, Beautiful, The Next Episode, Work It, Gin and Juice, What Da Hook Gon Be, Through the Wire, X Gon Give It To Ya, Ruff Ryder Anthem, Still Ballin', Naggin, Dear Mama, Pump It Up, Push It,Express Yourself, Game Over, Nothing But A G Thang, Rubber Band Man, Crank It Up, Fix Up, Hypnotize, Jesus Walks, Whoa and Don't Believe the Hype (appropriate, because this game stinks!) Don't bother learning any of them since you can mumble your way through and still get a "Blazin'" rating. Save your money and just sing along with your CDs. I wasted (...)so you don't have to...
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