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Guitar Hero II Review Print E-mail
Written by FunkyJ   
Wednesday, 25 July 2007


The Good:
Incredibly fun to play alone or with friends. Never has a game suited it's controller so well. Excellent Music. Cool Graphics.

The Bad:

If you've got a PS2, there's no real reason to get Guitar Hero 2 for Xbox 360.

Review
From the moment you put the strap over your shoulder, grasp the neck and rest your hand near the whammy bar, you feel like a Rock God. You instinctively take up the rock pose, recalling those hours of Rage and MTV you’ve watched, dreaming of being on stage with a guitar in your hand. And this is before you’ve even turned the console on! This is in Harmonix’s Guitar Hero II for the Xbox360, and it rocks!

If you’ve never played Guitar Hero on the PS2, it’s a simple concept to grasp. It’s a rhythm game like Dance Dance Revolution, Elite Beat Agents or Donkey Konga, where you have to press buttons in time with musical notes on a screen. Unlike those games, Guitar Hero isn’t a beat based game, but relies on guitar chords played on a guitar shaped controller. Instead of pushing buttons, stamping your feet or hitting a drum, you play a guitar by holding down the coloured “fret buttons” and strumming in time with the action on the screen.

Never before have a game and game controller felt so perfect!

Quotation Never before have a game and game controller felt so perfect! Quotation
. Although the guitar looks like what it is – a cheap plastic toy – once the music starts playing, once the notes start scrolling down the screen and you start strumming, once the digital crowd starts screaming, you forget the plastic and you’re on stage, holding a Gibson, rocking with the best. The combination of strumming and pressing buttons, and having to sometimes slide your fingers to nail a chord (two buttons at once) or hammer down a sequence with perfect timing is the ideal approximation of guitar playing, and feels so natural and exciting.


And unlike other rhythm games, the music that goes with the game is simply faultless. Guns’N’Roses, Nirvana, Janes Addiction, Motley Crew, Kiss, The Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, Black Sabbath, Rage Against The Machine… the list of fantastic rock bands goes on and on. The Xbox360 version features 12 new tracks including Hush by Deep Purple, The Trooper by Iron Maiden, as well as Dead! by My Chemical Romance. And, with the Xbox Live service, the game will remain fresh by offering new songs. So far 3 packs have been released, all found in the original Guitar Hero for PS2.

The other great thing about Guitar Hero II is the multiplayer. Other rhythm games rarely offer anything but a competitive mode, and Guitar Hero’s Pro Face-Off mode will make the meekest person into an Olympic styled competitor, its co-operative mode is where it really shines. One can opt to play lead or rhythm/bass, and together you can rock out to the absolute max. The feeling after you and a friend nail a really hard song and get four or five stars is incredible. Unfortunately you can’t compete or co-operate over the Xbox Live service, although the online leaderboards that allow you to compare career scores as well as individual song scores will have you trying to beat your friends score –I usually hate this kind of competitiveness, but there’s something about wanting to be the biggest Guitar Hero on your block that spurs you forward.

Of course, the Xbox360 version looks much slicker than previous versions. Not that you take too much notice when playing along to music, but the characters playing on screen as you’re playing look much more realistic, the concert halls you unlock are much more animated, and overall the game looks slicker and cleaner than the PS2 version. Of course, the Wide Screen High Definition functionalities are put to good use, and the sound of the Xbox360 is also crisper and more dynamic.

Quotation the Wide Screen High Definition functionalities are put to good use, and the sound of the Xbox360 is also crisper and more dynamic. Quotation


Simply put, Guitar Hero was one of the best games on the PS2, Guitar Hero II improved it immensely by adding co-op play, and so it’s also one of the best on Xbox360. Everything that was great about the PS2 version is in this version, and add new songs, great animations, downloadable songs and online leaderboards, you’ve got an even better version to upgrade to. Anyway, enough reading; just go out and get this game! I’m going back to crank it up to eleven and rock out!

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FunkyJ
About the author:
Last Updated ( Friday, 03 August 2007 )
 

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