Samba de Amigo: Party Central's K-Pop DLC is available now.
Image via Sega

Samba de Amigo Party Central adds K-pop DLC pack, Persona tracks incoming

Get ready to dance to BTS.

The Samba de Amigo Party Central DLC pack featuring a handful of K-pop bangers is out now. It includes tracks from popular bands BTS and FIFTY-FIFTY. Additionally, there’s a pack highlighting Sega’s own IP, like Rhythm Thief.

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Publisher and developer Sega also confirmed a Persona DLC bundle arrives in October. This includes costumes based on Persona 5‘s Joker and Morgana.

You can download the following K-pop tracks now for Samba de Amigo Party Central:

  • “Dynamite” by BTS
  • “Permission to Dance” by BTS
  • “Cupid (Twin Version) – Sped-Up” by FIFTY FIFTY

For the Sega Music Pack, you’ll get:

  • “Baka Mitai (Taxi Driver Edition)” from Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio
  • “Go Go Cheer Girl!” from Space Channel 5: Part 2
  • “Rhythm Thief Theme” from Rhythm Thief & the Emperor’s Treasure

At the end of October, the library grows again with the Phantom Thieves of Hearts Music Pack. As noted by , Sega’s Japan release includes Life Will Change, Rivers in the Desert, and Colors Flying High. The trio of songs are all from Persona 5 Royal, but there’s still some announcements left for fans hoping for other Atlus or Sega titles.

We’ll also get the Virtual Singer Music Pack alongside the Joker and Morgana Costume & Accessories Pack next month.

Sega has two more music packs on the way sometime in November. We don’t know what they entail just yet, but should see that confirmation soon. Nevertheless, there’s a lot of DLC to look forward to.

Samba de Amigo: Party Central has previously included songs from the Sonic the Hedgehog series. They are “Escape from the City” from Sonic Adventure 2, Sonic Frontiers “I’m Here,” “Open Your Heart” from Sonic Adventure, and “Reach for the Stars” from Sonic Colors: Ultimate.

As for those of you who’ve yet to dive into the party, Destructoid gave Samba de Amigo: Party Central a 6/10 review. “The controls are certainly an improvement from the Wii game, but the game still suffers from a lack of input when you move sideways,” the reviewer said.


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Chris Penwell
Chris is a writer for multiple outlets, including Destructoid! He loves narrative games like Kingdom Hearts, Life is Strange, and Beyond Good & Evil. However, he does enjoy Fortnite and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate from time to time.