The greatest Guitar Hero yet. Amazing
songs, phenomenal gameplay and it’s
online too! If you loved it before, you’ll
literally explode, and if you’ve never
taken the plunge, hurry up and take it.
SCORE
06/DEC/07
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GUITAR HERO 3 VIDEO W/COMMENTARY FROM THE X360 TEAM
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Can Neversoft actually make a
Guitar Hero? It’s the question
we’ve all been asking ourselves
ever since it was announced that
Harmonix would not be developing
Guitar Hero III. While the rhythm-action
masters trotted off to make Rock
Band, Activision’s favourite buddies
were given a damn hard task. Either
the brains behind Tony Hawk’s would
prove that lightning can strike twice, or
destroy one of videogames’ strongest
franchises. The tension!
While you sit there trying to hide
your sweaty palms, let’s just say there’s
really no need to worry. In fact, allow
your hands to dry up to a superior level
because Guitar Hero III is the best in
the series. Admittedly, a large reason
for this is how excellent the setlist is.
From the opening note of Foghat to the
ferocious conclusion of One (which is
a contender for greatest song ever, by
the way) there’s hardly a bad song in
the entire bunch. Obviously the beauty
of music is that one man’s heaven is
another’s hell, but on the whole we
doubt anyone can complain about what
Activision has pieced together. From the
niche bands to the monsters who’ve
been sitting on their rock thrones for
years, the majority of tracks have been
mapped out terrifically, ensuring that
the fact you’re just hitting buttons on a
plastic guitar is never apparent; a great
deal of appreciation needs to be placed
upon the shoulders of whoever made
the decision to include master tracks.
Covering a song is all well and good
– and in the case of Kansas on GH II
even better – but being able to play the
actual riff from the actual song with the
actual accompaniment adds a whole
new level to the experience.
This is the bare minimum we needed
from GH III, though. Without said
elements, the very core of what we
all love would have been killed off.
It’s the new inclusions where the eye
of judgement needs to be unleashed
– namely the boss battles. To be
blunt, we’re not fans! The concept
of getting to compete in a rock-off
against legitimate legends like Slash
and Tom Morello is brilliant. However,
the mandatory, inescapable power-ups
just don’t fit in with the concept. Why
can’t we just go toe-to-toe with the
Guns N’ Roses wizard to see who’s the
better Guitar Hero guitarist? Having to
concentrate on breaking opponent’s
strings or increasing their amount of
notes is far too hit and miss to ever feel
like a skill. If we ever take over the reins
at Activision (and dammit, we’re close),
just having a standard face-off against
a rock king would be our chosen way
forward. Unfortunately, the battles
don’t translate well when it comes to
multiplayer either. Power-ups such as
‘lefty-flip’ are so difficult to counter
that match-ups often last a matter of
seconds. It certainly defeats the point
of the genre, because before you can
even get into your rhythm, the contest
is over and your friend is laughing in
your face!
Oddly enough, this is by and large
irrelevant. The reason Guitar Hero
has been such a success is because
it’s a masterclass in making you feel
like you’re actually playing the guitar
and this sensation is so good in III that
minor annoyances are soon forgotten.
That, and the new guitar is supreme!
We were fans of the original – the
Explorer took its time but eventually
won us round – but the Gibson is a
truly beautiful contraption. The added
weight to the body mixed with fullon
wireless goodness is a damn fine
combination and the reason our white
guitar will be offered to potential co-op
buddies as we hold on to our wire-free
model with all of our might!
Mind you, it’s near essential that
we’re so enamoured with our tool of
musical destruction, because Nerversoft
has ramped up the difficulty. Having
four different fretboard speeds for each
level may seem unimportant, but some
songs take some serious doing and a
huge amount of talent. If your pride
relies on seeing that elusive five-star
rating after each track, you’re going
to need to retire from life and take up
work as a Guitar Hero junkie!
And so we find ourselves in an odd
situation – another person’s creation
has reached a new plateau thanks
to somebody else’s handiwork! Yes,
Harmonix laid the groundwork and
such a feat can never be taken away,
but Neversoft has done such a great job
it’d be wrong of us not to send much
deserved props its way. There’s not a
videogame enthusiast on this planet
that didn’t expect GH III to be majestic,
and that’s exactly what we’ve wound
up getting. Oh, and it has Metallica
on it, and for this reviewer, that’s
justification enough!
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