GENERAL NOTICE to anyone who buys DDR Hottest Party for the Wii, or ANY other DDR/Stepmania game:Please read! What to consider before buying DDR!
From what I understand, the Wii game includes a soft dance pad controller. I do feel that I should mention that soft dance pads are known to have short life spans. This is not just coming from myself; I used to belong to an online DDR community (I'm still a member on a couple of sites but I'm not very active, since I can't play at home anymore) who would generally say the same thing.
When I first got into DDR, I bought the PS2 version of DDR Max (yeah, this was awhile ago

) and ordered a couple of soft dance pads online. They worked very well for...about a week or two.
After this time, I started having problems with the controller responding sometimes; not always, but just enough that it was difficult to keep a full combo in a song. I generally ignored it, just hoping it wouldn't get any worse. After all, I was only learning and still a long way from being "good". I was playing 4 and 5-difficulty songs at the time, and full comboing them from time to time.
After a month of playing, one of my soft pads completely failed on me. The other pad, which had much less use (only when friends were there) was still in okay condition, but not perfect. Within 2 and a half months, I was DDR-pad-less. Both pads had become completely useless, from playing only a small portion of harder songs. I wasn't good enough to handle the hard songs, yet the pads still crumpled under the stress of being played on for a couple of months.
To continue this story, I was a little ticked for spending nearly $150 on two soft pads (they were padded and not cheap-quality pads to begin with!) and having them die on me so soon. I was aware that other dance pad designs were available, at a variety of costs but didn't want to spend the extra for the higher-quality dance pads, especially since I was just starting off and didn't know how long I'd stick with it.
Feeling deprived of DDR, I invested in a set of metal-construction DDR pads, which ran nearly $200 per controller, totalling $400 for the set. I figured, hey, Im' playing the game *A LOT* and I need the quality obviously, and I couldn't afford the $950 (now $750 due to the USA/Canada exchange rate) dance pad set I was drooling over at the time. I received these metal hard pads and was absolutely in love with them...until I opened the box. The construction, while definitely hard and metal, was flimsy and a bit cheap. It is Highly unrecommended to play on these metal dance pads on carpet (which I was) without putting a piece of plywood underneath, otherwise the frame would bend and warp out of shape over time....so off to the hardware store I go with the measurements for the plywood...
Okay, I have it all set up. Wait a minute! The response on these pads is terrible! You have to press the arrows so hard and they don't work half the time; what's going on! I unscrew one of the arrow panels and look at the metal contact sensor for the arrow...the "sensor" on the panel is made of TIN FOIL! So, back to the hardware store I go, with my measurements, to pick up squares of sheet metal to replace the useless contacts that come with the pads. Okay, NOW I'm done with the modifications and I think I'm ready to play...Yes, I'm finally ready to play.
They work fine for a few weeks, not absolutely perfect but acceptably good. Within a month, I crack one of the plastic (cheap plastic, I might add!) arrows. It's still useable but it looks very...not pretty. I resort to using grey duct-tape to patch up the crack and keep playing. Over time, response becomes steadily worse and worse. There is a critical design flaw in these dance pads: The electronics are housed under the back-right square of the pad, where a lot of stress is put for long periods of time. These electronics and wiring simply become damaged over time and use; I tried to patch it up with my limited electronics knowledge and skill but it was no use; these pads were fit for the garbage as well.
Oh, did I mention the metal frame was starting to warp anyway, even with the plywood modification?
Great, now I'm DDR Pad-less again...and my birthday is coming up soon. I wanted to have a DDR party at my birthday but I'm suddenly padless! I rush out to a games store and buy a couple of cheap soft pads for the party (which, if I may mention, were completely useless within a week..they just didn't respond anymore). This worked well enough but they obviously weren't a solution.
$45 (for 2) Soft pads with no padding inside: both Died within a week
$140 (for 2) Soft pads with foam padding: both Died within 2 months
$400 (for 2) Metal pads: both Died within 3 months (but better performance than the previous soft pads while they did work).
All this time, I was still drooling over the "high-performance" dance controllers from
Cobalt Flux but I couldn't handle the insanely high price tag...but it was my birthday coming up! My mom knew how much I was into DDR and she saw me go through all this trouble with my previous dance pads. She bought me one of the Cobalt Flux pads as a birthday gift and I bought the 2nd one myself (discount if you get the set of 2). Within a month, they were custom-built and arrived at my door. From the instant I played on these things, I knew they were a very different beast; big, solid, heavy, and TOUGH! There is nothing flimsy about them: build on a solid hardwood base, the electronics are all sealed within an external control box which connects to the pad itself...basically, there's nothing to break on these things! I have pulled off combos in the thousands without the pad messing up, and it can withstand the hardest songs I can survive (I can (well...could...on my absolute peak days...)pass the hardest song on DDR Extreme, so that's saying quite a bit for these pads!) Solid copper and sheet metal sensors with adjustable sensitivity by loosening and tightening a few screws (try not to strip these screws because you have to undo them to clean the contacts). The arrow panels are all made of lexan plastic, which is basically bulletproof, quite literally. It never showed any signs of cracking, even after all those years. And carpet? No problem. The wooden base withstood all our years of punishment on carpet! My friends and I enjoyed the set of 2 for nearly 3 YEARS with a couple of minor repairs and the usual maintenance (cleaning the electrical contacts every month or so. It's an easy job). When I finally sold the pads, they were still in perfectly good-working order and looked basically like new (just not as shiny, from being stepped on for 3 years). I just didn't have anywhere to use them, I had a friend come up to me and ask to buy them and I needed the money, so I sold them.
The moral to this story?
IF YOU READ NOTHING ELSE IN THIS POST, READ THIS:
$45 (for 2) Soft pads with no padding inside: both Died within a week
$140 (for 2) Soft pads with foam padding: both Died within 2 months
$400 (for 2) Metal pads: both Died within 3 months (but better performance than the previous soft pads while they did work).
$950 ((now $750) for 2 + shipping)) Cobalt Flux high-performance pads: Still live on! I've talked to the friend I sold mine to and they still work!
They must be 5 years old by now.If you want to play more than a couple of hours a week, you need *good* dance pads or you'll have nothing but trouble. Please consider the costs of replacement dance pads before investing in a DDR setup in your home. I can't guarantee that the soft pads that may come with your game will last you until your DDR career is over.
Bottom line: If you plan to upgrade DDR controllers, I recommend Cobalt Flux and ONLY Cobalt Flux. Feel free to look elsewhere for other opinions but CF pads are the only ones I will trust after my very expensive experience.
The other cheaper option? Build your own! Get a PS2 controller, tear the electronics out of it and build your own DDR controller around it. You can do this for less than half the cost of a CF pad...if you think you can handle the job. B)
Most DDR pads are sold as PS2 controllers. If you plan to use them with a PC for Stepmania, adapters do exist to convert PS2 controllers to USB controllers. This is how I connected my pads to Stepmania. Such adapters are difficult to find in retail stores however, and generally can only be found online.
Sorry if I sound like a walking billboard...I'm just throwing out these thoughts before somebody gets themselves in too deep with DDR. Due to the nature of the game, electronics are bound to get beaten around a little bit; I just wanted to expose everyone to the ins and outs of the DDR controller world and how some DDR controllers (fail to) address this situation.
ALSO NOTE that I haven't been the DDR controller market for a couple of years. Maybe the new soft and metal pads are better than they were 3 or 4 years ago. If that's the case, completely disregard everything I said

. I just know I had bad luck with DDR pads.
That being said: DDR is fun!

I've been deprived of DDR for over a year! Grrrr...*hopes to get it back soon...*
Any questions, feel free to throw them my way!

Funny side story:
I pulled a little practical joke on a friend one day. I invited him over for DDR, but I had a special..treat for him: I furniture-polished one of the DDR pads so it was niiice and slick. Of course, 3 guesses which pad I had him play on!

I enjoyed that.

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