Meanwhile, in the wonderful 'LumBEARjack', as you're chopping logs of various sizes you're gradually joined by a growing cast of cats who launch into a hypnotically bizarre stretchy dance that's all but impossible to ignore.
When it returns, you'll notice his head has been replaced by what can only be described as an anxious tomato. It steadily draws back to reveal the batter is now wearing a bunny mask, then zooms all the way out until you can barely see the room. The camera starts to zoom in and out, before pulling in tightly on a wiggling craft in the middle of the room, whose hatch opens to reveal a grinning alien squid. But then things take a turn for the strange. In 'Spaceball,' for example, you're asked to smack pitches from inside a green room floating inside a star field. With that established, Megamix's next trick is a mischievous stroke of genius: it does everything within its power to put you off. But it's always instinctive: You never need to worry about what you're doing, only when you're doing it. Occasionally, that extends to a second button, and/or the d-pad and sometimes you'll need to hold the button down rather than tap it. Above: 'Rhythm Heaven Megamix', E3 2016 official game trailer