Notes about the charts

Song- Na Dushe Perepoloh
Artist- Verka Serduchka feat. Fillipp Kirkorov
BPM- 132 
Step Artist- NIQ9 

http://www.youtube.com/TeamRAR

Singles 1/4/6/ 8/x
Doubles x/5/9/10/x

Single Beginner: Typical beginner chart. It follows the rules of the pre-SN beginner charts. 

Single Light: I like the DDR MAX era light charts, so I tend to make mine like them.
There is an 8th note section in the beginning, but I think it was the best thing to do there. 
I bumped the rating up to 4 because of that part alone.

Single Standard: What I would call a staple 6. There are quite a few 8th note sections. Most are
5 notes, some are 3, and a few near the end are 7 notes. All of the 8th notes have very easy patterns
and anyone who can play 5s and 6s should have no trouble with this.   

Single Maniac: Mostly 8th notes, with the occasional 16th note triple. Measure 24 has a 4 step 
24th note burst, but it's an easy step pattern and even if you completely miss it, you won't fail. 
For those of you who use noteskins with the classic DDR freeze arrows, you might have a hard time
reading measure 49 and others like it. I tested it on a noteskin like that and didn't think it was 
too bad.

Doubles Light: Since the standard and maniac charts are quite a bit harder, I put more 8th notes in 
the light chart. It's nothing I haven't seen in DDR charts before, so it should be fine. It's rated 
a 5, but like most doubles light charts, the difficulty is unbalanced, so there are portions that 
look like a 3 footer, and some parts that resemble a 6. 

Doubles Standard: Making full doubles, for me, is very tedious. While the end result is usually fun, 
I tend to try some crazy patterns after a while. I actually ended up scrapping my first draft of the
doubles standard chart because of the patterns. I redid it, and I'm still not completely happy with 
it, but I figured it would be better than having just a light and heavy chart. The majority of the 
chart is a translation of the single heavy chart. Why is it rated a 9 then? Well, I used a few patterns 
that a player might not know how to do properly if they can't pass 9 footers on doubles. As long as you 
have seen the patterns and know how to do them, it's a 7. Spins: measures 41, 43, 45, 49, 51, 63, 65*, and 68 

* The spin in measure 65 is a spin across both pads. If you have played Flowers double expert, a similar 2 pad 
spin exists in that chart too. To do the spin correctly, you must be facing left on the up-down jump at the 
beginning of the measure. Keep your right foot on the up arrow for the next jump still facing left, then keep 
your left foot on the right arrow for the next jump, then jump on the up-left jump still facing backwards, 
then for the last jump, keep your left foot on the up arrow. You should now be facing either forward or to 
the right.

Doubles Maniac: Don't play this chart if you don't play ITG. It's still mostly 8th notes, but the crossovers
alone are hard enough to make this a 10. It's not as hard as Reactor, but some of the crossovers are harder 
to visualize on a sightread. As long as you don't double step anything, you will be in the correct position 
for the next crossover. If you mess up though, you might be led into the next crossover wrong, which could 
result in misses. It's definitely possible no bar, but I recommend using the bar for this. 

For those of you voting for the contest, please do not comment on the doubles charts unless you actually 
play doubles. I made the doubles charts mostly for ITG players because the only way non-ITG players can
play these is if they have a home doubles setup, which is pretty rare. 

    	            