Play excellently though and you’ll discover the crowd starts to go wild, your band mates are elated and the whole venue is buzzing. Continue to perform badly and you might just find the audience starts throwing things. Your band mates will start getting grumpy and attempt to motivate you. Start messing up your notes and the audience will stop cheering and look at you in disbelief. You’ll move from smaller stages and make your way up to the headline spot.Īnd the massive difference with Guitar Hero Live is that you perform from the perspective of the lead guitarist, all in front of a live-filmed audience that reacts to the way you perform. In Guitar Hero Live you become the lead guitarist in a variety of fictional bands as they play their way through two festivals: Rock the Block and Sound Dial. It’s more of the campaign style portion of the game, and it’s probably what you’ve been seeing in all the ads. It takes the form of two distinct sections in this revamped Guitar Hero game: Guitar Hero Live and Guitar Hero TV (GHTV).įirstly, you’ll need to play through at least some of Guitar Hero Live in order to access GHTV. Which brings me on to the actual gameplay. The PS4 only has two USB ports after all. It’s not a huge issue most of the time, but if you wanted to play on PS4 with two controllers and a USB microphone, you’re going to have to invest in an USB hub to use them all at once. This dongle must be inserted into your console of choice in order to make the kit compatible. What’s more, you need a Bluetooth dongle for each guitar controller. This means you need to have the volume on your TV fairly loud in order to hear the often subtle guitar tracks. But the guitars’ buttons are very noisy, making a loud click with each press, and the strum bar creaks and clicks too. When you’re paying these kinds of prices – although it’s considerably less than the £109.99 Rock Band 4 guitar-only package – you expect a premium product. Or you can opt for the two-guitar bundle with the game for £124.99, but that’s only available on Xbox One and PS4. Guitar Hero Live with a single guitar and a physical copy of the game costs £74.99 on PS4, PS3, Wii U and Xbox 360, and £79 on Xbox One. Series, the guitars themselves leave something to be desired. This changes as you turn it up to Advanced, so don’t feel like it’s just you if you’re struggling with the rhythms of Regular.Īlthough the design changes are a welcome revamp to the Guitar Hero It’s particularly difficult on the Regular level, strangely enough, as the notes don’t always correspond to the guitar tunes you’ll hear. I did find learning the new control system took quite a while, though. Then being asked to press more than one button simultaneously mimics chord progressions you’d make on a real guitar – albeit less complex. The button positioning makes it feel as though you’re switching between strings on the fret board when you change between black and white notes. Its still the same formula as before: hit the appropriate button as it hits the line along the bottom of the screen in time with the music. Yes, yes, we know, it’s still an undersized, plastic guitar without strings, but Freestyle Games is definitely onto something here. Plus, Freestyle Games has made sure the Hero Power button is there within pinky’s reach if you’re not feeling rock enough to tilt the whole guitar to activate Hero Power.īut the idea behind switching out the coloured buttons for this new black and white combo is to make the overall gameplay feel more like you’re playing a real guitar. You’ve still got the strum bar, which you’ll need to press to sound the notes, and a whammy bar for bending notes on a whim. Instead, you’ve got a trio of white buttons along the bottom, with three black buttons on the top row. Gone is the more traditional five-coloured button array for two rows of three buttons. Publisher Activision and developer Freestyle Games is totally revamping the game, again after a five year hiatus.īut unlike its rival, Guitar Hero Live is trying to reinvent the musical simulation genre. But October’s spotlight is falling on Guitar Hero Live (and some other major titles). Rock Band returned in September, launching five years after the last series’ entry. But here I am, packing away the Rock Band 4 kit just in time to set up Guitar Hero Live and its redesigned guitars. I never thought 2015 would be the year that saw me spending my weekends rocking out with a plastic guitar again. Available on PS4 (tested), Xbox One, Xbox 360, PS3 and Wii U
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