Atlas Veldine
I like the idea, but yeah three problems: 1. on a phone, the screen is too small with this number of keys. 2. sliding a finger from one key to the next shouldn't hit both keys. 3. even in the first song, it offers no opportunity to learn how the notes correspond to the keys, meaning you just know how to play piano to see any benefit, but the marketing makes it sound like it teaches you.
41 people found this review helpful
Thank you for sharing your feedback. Have you checked the Practice mode which is available for every song? The music stops and waits for the player's input. It's very easy to observe the staff and which key needs to be pressed in this mode. The keys that you need to press are shown as red on some of the difficulty levels. Hope that helps!
memandylov
If this is meant to teach people how to play piano, it's not doing a very good job of that. I already have a basic idea of what notes are what and where to find them on a keyboard, but any difficulty past practice mode is a pain. There's nothing to indicate tempo, but if you're just a millisecond late to hitting the first note, you get totally derailed and fail. There has to be at least a little bit of room for error. A beginner isn't going to start with robotic accuracy
15 people found this review helpful
Kat McKimmy
As someone who loves musical games and even knows how to play a little piano, THIS IS AWFUL. I know how to read sheet music but having it scroll is TERRIBLE. Half of competent playing is reading ahead and you can't do that at all. Even worse, there's no indication of the correct tempo and if you don't start on practice first, you won't know what speed you're expected to go. While pretty, it feels like this was made by someone who is VERY musically gifted or, more likely, doesn't actually play.
2 people found this review helpful