
| Feature | Drum ‘n’ Fun! (2018) | Rhythm Festival (2022) | |---------|----------------------|------------------------| | Base songs | ~70 | ~76 | | Rhythm Pass | No | Yes (500+ songs) | | Online battle | Local only | Global 4-player | | Toy Box modes | 6 mini-games | Rhythm creation + 5 mini-games | | Motion controls | Poor (laggy) | Improved (calibration tool) | | Avatar depth | Basic | 500+ items |
Conclusion: Rhythm Festival is the definitive Taiko experience on Switch – but only if you have the Rhythm Pass. Without it, Drum ‘n’ Fun! has comparable value at a lower price. Taiko no Tatsujin- Rhythm Festival Switch NSP F...
Controls are flexible and feel intuitive. Motion controls add theatricality and a delightful physicality to sessions, while traditional button play keeps things tight for competitive scoring. Difficulty settings are considerate, letting new players enjoy the music without frustration, while higher tiers demand the kind of pinpoint timing that will keep hardcore rhythm fans glued to the screen. | Feature | Drum ‘n’ Fun
No game is perfect. The UI, as charming as it is, can sometimes feel cluttered between songs, and a few track choices lean heavily on nostalgia rather than fresh innovation. Online features, if present, occasionally lack the polish of the local experience — but for a game that so clearly prioritizes immediate, in-person fun, those weaknesses are more forgivable than fatal. Controls are flexible and feel intuitive
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