Guitar Hero III details bekend gemaakt Uitgegeven: 23 mei 2007 14:26
Terwijl iedereen lekker aan het rocken is met Guitar Hero II en er hier en daar wat nieuws over Rock Band naar voren komt, zou je haast vergeten dat er ook nog een Guitar Hero III aankomt! Guitar Hero III zal voor alle next-gen consoles uitkomen, evenals voor de Playstation 2. Vandaag werden de eerste details van het derde deel uit de gitaarserie door Activision bekend gemaakt. In Guitar Hero III zullen nieuwe speelmodi (waaronder een online multiplayer mode) zitten, draadloze gitaarcontrollers voor alle platformen, downloadable content (onduidelijk of dit voor alle platformen geldt), en liedjes van onder andere de Rolling Stones, Muse, Heart en de Beastie Boys.Dankzij betere deals met platenlabels zullen er meer artiesten vertegenwoordigt zijn in het spel. Verder zijn er een zevental nummers bekend, die in hun originele vorm in het spel zitten, het gaat hier om: Paint It Black van de Rolling Stones, Cherub Rock van Smashing Pumpkins, Sabotage van de Beastie Boys, The Metal van Tenacious D, My Name is Jonas van Weezer, Knights of Cydonia van Muse en Cult of Personality van Living Colour.Verder maakte Activision vier nummers bekend die als "as made famous by" cover in Guitar Hero III zullen verschijnen: Rock And Roll All Nite van Kiss, School's Out van Alice Cooper, Slow Ride van Fog Hat en Barracuda van Heart. De draadloze gitaren zullen verwijderbare faceplates hebben, die zelf op te leuken zijn. Ook zullen de kleuren van de knoppen gerestyled worden. De gitaar van de PS3, Xbox 360 en Wii is gebaseerd op de legendarische Gibson Les Paul, onder andere gebruikt door Slash en Jimmy Page. De Playstation 2 bezitters zullen gebruik maken van een gitaar gebaseerd op de Kramer. Alle speelmodi van de vorige delen zullen erin zitten, maar ook nieuwe elementen. Er zal een nieuwe multiplayer battle mode inzitten, evenals een online multiplayer. Het is echter niet duidelijk of de online mode tegen elkaar is of een coöpvorm. Het meest verrassende is echter dat er daadwerkelijke eindbaas 'gevechten' zullen zijn. Het lange wachten kan beginnen.
Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s Hands-On
If you didn't think the '80s is really a genre unto itself, think again. We got our hands on the first headbanging offshoot of the wildly popular Guitar Hero franchise.
By Brad Shoemaker, GameSpot
Posted May 24, 2007 5:43 pm PT
Ride the Tiger
You can see his stripes but you know he's clean in this footage of the latest Guitar Hero.Watch Download
The day prolific publisher Activision acquired Guitar Hero developer RedOctane, we knew we'd be seeing a whole lot more of the hard-rocking franchise that set rhythm gamers (and fret boards) on fire in late 2005. And we can't complain about the sudden appearance of the series' first offshoot, Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s, which franctically breathes life back into the decade that probably inspired the whole Guitar Hero concept in the first place. We recently had a chance to get our hands on the latest build of the game, due out solely on the PlayStation 2 in July, and found that while very little has changed since Guitar Hero II, the delightfully kitschy song selection that's on offer in this first Encore title more than justifies another Guitar Hero product hitting the shelves so soon.
We can't speak for the final game since it's not due out for a few weeks, but the version of Rocks the 80s that we've been playing seems more like an expansion pack for Guitar Hero II than a new game in its own right--but that's probably the aim of the Encore series anyway. You'll recognize returning characters and venues from the last game, since no new ones have been added. But the stuff that's in here has definitely gotten a proper '80s retrofitting. Burly axe man Axel Steel is sporting tight black jeans, a headband, and a wicked mullet, while Izzy Sparks has gone the glam route with spiked bracelets, a kerchief around his neck, and big blonde hair that would have made Farrah Fawcett blush. Heck, even the hyperkinetic animated intro movie from Guitar Hero II has been recolored in bright, '80s-style neon. At least you'll get plenty of new artwork around the menus and such that's appropriate to the period.
All your favorite guitarists and venues have been retrofitted in '80s style.
Mechanically, the game feels and plays just like its predecessor, with the series' standard progressive career mode, all the same cooperative and competitive two-player modes (with full bass or rhythm-guitar tracks for the second player), and the training mode that will let you practice up in slow motion on the many blazing riffs found on the set list. Neversoft may have taken over development of the Guitar Hero series for the upcoming third installment, but original game developer Harmonix is the only software house listed in the credits here (as this is probably the last project they completed for Activision before moving on to MTV's ambitious Rock Band). As such, all the note patterns, loading-screen humor, and other signature elements of the series feel just like vintage Guitar Hero.
Since everything else is more or less the same, the songs in Rocks the 80s are the real stars of the show, and the developers have assembled a pretty face-melting assortment of iconic '80s metal and glam rock, with even some bubblegum pop-rock and new wave thrown in for good measure. Unfortunately, we can only discuss the two sets of songs that have been announced so far, but even those are a pretty representative sampling of the game's overall track list.
We can't help getting especially giddy over some of the cheesiest '80s rock inclusions here, like Dio's "Holy Diver" and Ratt's "Round and Round," but then you've got stuff like "I Want Candy" by Bow Wow Wow and absurdly coiffed new-wave sensation Flock of Seagulls with "I Ran (So Far Away)." That song and Twisted Sister's "I Wanna Rock" are also the two songs lifted directly from the master recordings that have been announced so far, but with Guitar Hero's cultural cachet increasing by the minute--not to mention the recent announcement of quite a few big-name original recordings planned for Guitar Hero III--we're hoping a few more originals sneak their way onto the list.
Remember when it was OK to have hair this big?
After the extremely high bar set by WaveGroup with the cover songs in the original game, we felt like Guitar Hero II had a few rough patches, with some not-quite-soundalike vocalists and song changes occasionally reminding you that you were indeed listening to a cover and not the original. We feel like the quality and similarity to the originals on the covers we've heard so far in Rocks the 80s are back to original form, and we couldn't help throwing up the horns and making silly rock faces once in a while when the solos kicked in on emblematic songs like Skid Row's "18 and Life" and Ratt's "Round and Round." Anybody who lived and rocked through the '80s is going to relive some happy (and probably embarrassing) moments with this one when it hits stores in July.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Seep, jij Blog spammer, je verwacht toch niet dat ik dit hele stuk ga lezen he......wat is de samenvatting? nieuwe 80's rock voor guitar hero?
Er komen 2 games uit:
Guitar Hero 80's
Guitar Hero 3
Bekende songs voor de 80's:
Flock of Seagulls: I ran (so far away)
Bow Wow: I want Candy
Bekende Songs Guitar Hero 3:
Beastie Boys: Sabotage
Muse: Knights of Cydonia
Rolling Stones: Paint it black
Dit alles in een nut shell.
aaaight
Post a Comment