

Just do as many button inputs as the host.

Despite being one of the few mini-games to have insta-fail conditions, you don't actually need any rhythm to pass. Bonus points for the Fever version with it's unique visual style. Best Boss Ever: Both 9th Remixes from Heaven and Fever for having great music and providing a good amount of challenge before their respective 10th Remixes.It can be one of the most challenging games in the series if you struggle with Rhythm Tweezers' inputs, though, considering you have to clear it with less than three mistakes for a Superb. The remix also primarily consists of Rhythm Tweezers, in contrast to the remix featuring all the games (which is oddly a Disc-One Final Boss, Remix 6, instead of the final remix). It goes at a moderate, easy rhythm, and the cues are pretty predictable. Anti-Climax Boss: The final remix (Remix 8) in Tengoku.To his relief and delight, the game turned out to be a hit. And You Thought It Would Fail: Chief director Kazuyoshi Osawa was initially nervous and unsure if Tengoku would do well and assumed that it would only attract a niche audience prior to release.One particular example is MC Adore with her black-haired counterpart in Remix 9. While not common, there are some who tend to ship the normal incarnations of the characters with their incarnations in the remixes.It helps that even though they're intended to be the same character, they look and sound different enough that they can seen as two different characters (which they're often interpreted as in Fanon). There are fans who tend to ship the original pop singer from Heaven and her redesign from Megamix together.
