Tambourine

"Ready to play a little Simian Says on the tambourine?"

- Tambourine Description

Tambourine (タンバリン) is the seventh game in Rhythm Heaven Fever. Getting a Perfect on it will unlock its music, titled "Tambourine".

Gameplay
In this game, in front of the player is a little monkey holding a tambourine. When the game starts, the monkey will perform a "set" of notes, shaking and hitting his tambourine to create a pattern. After the monkey finishes, he will cue you with a call. Then the player will have to repeat the pattern to the monkey by shaking and hitting his own tambourine. After the pattern is finished, the monkey will start the next set. Each set consists of 7 notes, with the length between notes and the command type varying.

Controls

 * A: Shake tamborine
 * A + B: Hit tambourine

Hit or Miss

 * Hit: The monkey continues watching. At the end of a set done well, the monkey will smile, and flowers will appear around him.
 * Barely: None for this rhythm game. A barely counts as a hit.
 * Miss: The monkey will start to grimace and sweat. Going off tempo for a while will cause a frog to jump on his head and stay there for a while before jumping off.

Rating Notes

 * Try Again:
 * Ok:
 * Superb: OOOOOOOK!

Appearances

 * Tambourine
 * Remix 2
 * Remix 9
 * Remix 10

Two-Player Mode
A version of the game in the two-player mode can be unlocked by finishing the original version and the two-player version of Fork Lifter.

In the game, the first player is in front of a blue monkey, while the second is in front of an orange monkey. When the monkey in front of the player shakes or hit the tambourine, the corresponding player has to hit or shake when the monkeys are finishy the set. The game starts with the monkeys playing the same pattern at the same time, but soon changes up when the monkeys play. This has one monkey playing the first 4 notes in a set, while the other plays the first 3, requiring the players to do the same.

Trivia

 * This is the only game in Rhythm Heaven Fever that has no animation on the title card.
 * The reason a monkey was used for this game might be because of the cymbal-banging monkey, a well-known children's toy.