Melbourne Shuffle (Dance), also called shuffle, slide dance, super slide, drift dance, ghost step, is a kind of dragging feet The dance steps are based on the sliding steps with a few more beats, that is, a few movements. The movements are fast and powerful, the music is powerful and shocking (mostly Hardstyle Music and DJ dance music, etc.), and the dance is full of dynamic energy and extremely powerful. Live rendering power. It emerged in some underground dance halls in Melbourne, Australia in the 1980s. Its unique dance steps, powerful music and unique clothing (fluorescent pants) are extremely eye-catching and gradually became popular; in 1992, the name of the dance in other overseas areas In this year of confusion, Australians began to call this dance Shuffle. The name was determined. In December 2002, an Australian newspaper explained the Melbourne Shuffle on the front page. This was the first time the Shuffle appeared in mainstream media. After that, it became popular in Malaysia and Brunei (there are Shuffle competitions in these two countries) and then spread to the United Kingdom, Germany, Thailand and other countries. With the help of the Internet and online media uTube, it became popular around the world. In 2005, a DVD feature documentary was published introducing Melbourne shuffle dance. In 2006, the media that quickly increased its reputation and popularity was the uTube video website. On September 6, 2008, the Australian media network10 reported on Shuffle, a hard style dance (HSD: Hard Style Dance). In November 2008, the "So You Think You Can Shuffle" dance show was launched on Utube. In 2009, "So You Think You Can Shuffle" dance show fan gatherings and competitions were held in countries such as Australia and Germany. It became popular internationally in the 2000s (thanks to the Utube video website in 2006). Shuffle was introduced to China around 2004, thanks to Dongdong singing (uku) and overseas Chinese studying in mel who loved shuffle. Friends of the dance, as well as a shuffle dance organization called 〆, ghost drag clan﹏, broadcast China's first shuffle dance program on Shandong Satellite TV in 2009. This was the first time shuffle dance appeared in China's mainstream media. The three members are Zhu Xiaodi, Green, Li Wenguang, Seven and Chai Xiaofei from Henan Province. In 2010, the first Melbourne shuffle dance equipment store (CSD Melbourne shuffle dance equipment store) appeared in China, as well as more shuffle dance organizations such as MASK.