Dtxmania - Including Drummania Mixes. Works Wi... 〈TOP〉

That’s when Konami noticed. Around 2008, official DTXMania development stopped. No announcement. No goodbye. The source code repository went dark. Rumors flew: a Konami lawyer had contacted fromage personally. But the community had already forked the code. New branches appeared: DTXMania GIT , DTXMania DX , and later DTXMania Core (which added support for GITADORA mixes, Konami’s modern replacement for GuitarFreaks & DrumMania).

Today, DTXMania lives on in the shadows of every rhythm game convention. At events like MAGFest or JAEPO , you’ll find a laptop hooked to an Alesis electronic drum kit, running DTXMania with a custom skin that looks like DrumMania 5th Mix . New players ask, “Wait, is this an arcade machine?”

Then, a whisper spread through underground rhythm game forums like VJ Army and Geocities fan pages: “There’s a program. It runs on your PC. It plays every DrumMania mix.” DTXMania - Including Drummania mixes. Works wi...

One night, on a now-defunct IRC channel, a user named h8utah dropped a link: "DTXMania + 10th Mix assets. Full. Pedal fixes included." The download took six hours over DSL. When it finally ran—when the familiar blue interface loaded and the first drum fill of "The Sunshower" hit—grown arcade veterans cried. Not from nostalgia, but from . A piece of interactive music history that was supposed to be gone forever was now playable on a cheap laptop. The Pedal That Broke the Game DTXMania had a secret weapon: custom charts .

Official DrumMania charts are locked to specific BPMs and note lanes. DTXMania let you chart anything . A fan named Nautilus decided to chart the impossible: the drum solo from Rush’s "Tom Sawyer" with four pedal notes in rapid succession—something the original arcade hardware couldn’t even parse due to its single-pedal input limit. That’s when Konami noticed

But the real magic? It could read .

To play it, Nautilus modded a real Kickbox (a USB MIDI interface) to accept two bass drum pedals. He mapped the second pedal to a hidden "hi-hat control" lane in DTXMania’s code. When he posted the video of his clear, the comments exploded: “This isn’t DrumMania. This is DTXMania. And it’s better.” No goodbye

Konami released it in 2004. It had a now-classic setlist: "Over the Top" , "She Said" , "A.D. 2079" . But arcade operators hated it—the difficulty spiked hard, and casual players stopped feeding it coins. Many operators overwrote the hard drive with the safer 9th Mix. Within a year, original 10th Mix cabinets became extinct in the wild.