8.0

Eurogamer: Jam with the Band Review

Whether you're more likely to go solo or indulge in an epic multiplayer jam, you'll find Nintendo has packed enough in this oddly garish package to keep you occupied for a good while. In the continued absence of a third Ouendan game - and with Keiichi Yano and team busy with Lips DLC that's not likely to happen any time soon, more's the pity - Jam with the Band should fill the portable-rhythm-action-shaped hole in your life very nicely indeed.

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eurogamer.net
10°

News: Jam With The Band Coming to 3DS

In a recent Nintendo Direct presentation, Nintendo have announced that smash DS hit, Jam With The Band will be coming to Nintendo 3DS...

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nintendofansonline.co.uk
8.0

GamesRadar: Jam with the Band Review

In conjunction with a single-card multiplayer mode (where you and up to seven pals can perform on different instruments or sing alongside each other), there is much more than meets the eye to Jam with the Band.

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gamesradar.com
7.0

Videogamer: Jam with the Band Review

Videogamer writes: "Anyone remember Daigasso! Band Brothers? The rhythm action game that was expected to launch alongside the original DS console back in 2005 but never actually found its way out of Japan? Perhaps not. But five years down the line and it's finally here, under the new Euro-friendly name of Jam with the Band. For rhythm action fans who've played their copies of Elite Beat Agents, Guitar Hero: On Tour and Rhythm Paradise to death, Jam with the Band could be just what the doctor ordered. It fuses tapping, singing and composing into one tidy package, and aside from the fact the garish visuals haven't been lost along the way, it's been well worth the wait."

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videogamer.com