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             It's a typical Friday evening at Sony Metreon's Airtight Garage 
            arcade, and teenagers and adults alike are watching the enthusiastic 
            dancers of the Dance Dance Revolution game. DDR is the latest craze 
            in video arcade entertainment for the young and the agile.  Brian Perez and Samantha Valdez, both 14, dance to the DDR tunes 
            every chance they get. They each have their own style of moving to 
            the pulsating beat of the music.  Perez, a student at Westmoor High School in Daly City, crosses 
            his legs and pivots around to face the audience and gets down on his 
            hands to touch the arrows on the platform. Valdez, who attends the 
            School of the Arts Alternative High School in The City, is lithe and 
            dances like a cheerleader.  Standing 8 feet high, DDR is equipped with its own soundtrack of 
            a variety of pop music, house and hip-hop music blaring from a 
            machine. The dancers watch the monitor for the arrows rising from 
            the bottom of the screen. As the traveling arrows match the 
            stationary ones at the top, the players step on a corresponding 
            panel on the platform. Two up arrows tell the dancer to step on that 
            arrow twice. Every so often a male voice from the machine bellows 
            out encouraging remarks like "cool moves" or "stay cool" when a 
            dancer misses a step. After successfully completing each song, the 
            dancers move on to one with a faster beat.  Perez first danced with DDR in Santa Monica. "It's fun and keeps 
            me productive. I like music games," he said.  Valdez said she first encountered the game during a family 
            vacation at Disneyland. "My Dad saw it and thought it was 
            interesting and made us play with it." Her parents sometimes go to 
            the Metreon, located at Fourth and Mission streets in The City's 
            South of Market district, to watch Valdez and her sister dance.  Every city has its own style of dancing to DDR's music. Kirsten 
            Maynard, Metreon's public relations manager, said there are even 
            different styles among Bay Area DDR fanatics.  "Dancers in Milpitas have a flamboyant style and Sunnyvale is 
            more subdued," she said. "But San Francisco is evolving and its 
            style is a combination of the two." The Golfland facilities in 
            Milpitas and Sunnyvale each have their own DDR machines.  According to Marlene Saritzky, Metreon's director of 
            communications and external affairs, the Metreon did not expect the 
            game to become so popular.  "We didn't exactly know what to expect as far as plays-per-day 
            when DDR arrived, especially as we were the first in the city to get 
            it," Saritzky said. "We projected a minimum of at least 30 plays per 
            day. What we got in the first month was 4,000 plays."  The Metreon is still the only place in San Francisco that offers 
            the Dance Dance Revolution game.  DDR has become so popular that fans set up a Web site (http://www.ddrfreak.com/). It 
            lists everything from events to dancing techniques.  The mass interest in video games is growing. According to the 
            Interactive Digital Software Association, a service provider to 
            entertainment software publishers, 60 percent of all Americans play 
            video games. Entertainment software sales topped $6.1 billion last 
            year, an 11 percent increase from 1998.  But unlike the traditional arcade games where each play typically 
            costs 50 cents to $1, DDR at the Metreon charges $4 for a five-dance 
            game. Regulars like Perez and Valdez say they spend an average of 
            $50 per week.  Even though DDR costs more than most arcade games, the company's 
            manufacturer, Japan-based Konami Inc., believes that parents like 
            the game. Mary Hermanson, a spokeswoman for Konami's U.S. division, 
            based in Buffalo Grove, Ill., said, "The parents' reaction is 
            definitely positive because it is nonviolent. If anything, it helps 
            the player with his foot-eye coordination."  Hermanson says the game first caught on along the West Coast with 
            kids in their late teens. Konami is expected to launch a home 
            version for Sony's PlayStation next January.  |