Mr. Upbeat

Revision as of 21:16, 31 August 2021 by Tox (talk | contribs)
This page is about the game named Mr. Upbeat. "I suppose" you may be looking for the character of the same name?

Mr. Upbeat (ウラおとこ?, Ura Otoko), also written as Mr Upbeat in Beat the Beat: Rhythm Paradise, is the 1st Endless Game in Rhythm Tengoku, unlocked with 1 Medal, and the 1st in international releases of Rhythm Heaven Fever, unlocked with 3 Medals.

Gameplay

Screenshot GBA Ura Otoko.png
Screenshot Wii Mr. Upbeat.png

The player controls a mysterious little guy named Mr. Upbeat, who must step over a metronome needle to the offbeat of the song. As the game starts, a voice counts off a rhythm for eight beats. After this, the needle begins to swing at Mr. Upbeat. To dodge it, the player needs to hop over the needle, which happens on the offbeats. To assist the player, the light on Mr. Upbeat's head flashes on the offbeat. After 16 steps, the needle stops. The player recieves a point, the tempo increases, and the game repeats.

In Rhythm Heaven Fever, each step gives a point instead of one point for every 16 steps. In addition, the tempo change happens every 32 steps rather than every 16.

Controls

  • Ⓐ: Step

Timing Display

  • Perfect!/Ace!?:
  • Early!/Late!?:
  • Miss...?:

Appearances

Trivia

  • In Rhythm Tengoku, Mr. Upbeat has the word ウラ (Ura?) written above him. This is removed in Rhythm Heaven Fever.
  • The High Score jingle in Rhythm Tengoku was repurposed from an unused Drum Lesson-esque sequence[1]. Interestingly, this is the only Endless Game in Rhythm Tengoku to acknowledge when the player achieves a High Score.
  • Mr. Upbeat does not appear in Minna no Rhythm Tengoku. The game Manzai was substituted with Mr. Upbeat due to the Japanese-dialogue focused nature of the game[2].
  • If the word POSITIVE is put into Police Call, the player will be pointed to there being a hidden word in this game (the word is MATCH: every 130 steps Mr. Upbeat's antenna grows larger and displays the word one letter at a time, then returns to normal). The codeword can be put into Police Call for an easter egg.
  • The UK English spelling of Mr Upbeat in Beat the Beat: Rhythm Paradise makes this game and the Remixes the only games whose names differ across the two English versions.

Unused

Main article: Mr. Upbeat/Unused

In Other Languages

Language Name Meaning
Flag of Japan.svg Japanese ウラおとこ Backwards Man
Flag of the United States.svg EnglishNOA Mr. Upbeat
Flag of the United Kingdom (3-5).svg EnglishNOE Mr Upbeat
Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg French M. Contretemps
Mr. Upbeat[3]
Mr. Backbeat
Flag of Spain.svg Spanish Don Contratiempo Mr. Backbeat
Flag of Italy.svg Italian Mr. Contrattempo
Mr. Upbeat[4]
Mr. Backbeat
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Dutch Mr. Upbeat[5]
Flag of Portugal.svg Portuguese Mr. Upbeat[6]
Flag of South Korea.svg Korean 미스터 엇박 Mr. Offbeat

References

Logo GBA Rhythm Tengoku.svg Ura Otoko Game GBA E-2.png Game GBA E-3.png Game GBA E-4.png
Logo DS Rhythm Heaven.svg Game DS E-1.gif Shoot-'Em-Up Game DS E-3.gif Samurai Slice Game DS E-5.gif Game DS E-6.gif
Logo Wii Rhythm Heaven Fever.svg
One Player
Game Wii E-4.gif Game Wii E-1.gif Munchy Monk Game Wii E-3.gif Game Wii E-4 JP.gif Game Wii E-5.gif
Logo Wii Rhythm Heaven Fever.svg
Two Player
Game Wii PE-1.gif Game Wii PE-2.gif Game Wii PE-3.gif Game Wii PE-4.gif Bossa Nova
Logo 3DS Rhythm Heaven Megamix.svg Artwork 3DS Coin Toss Alt.png Sick Beats Artwork 3DS Charging Chicken.png Artwork 3DS Clap Trap Alt.png