Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The game contains cartoon-ized artwork consisting of drawn backgrounds with embedded video sequences played by actors. The game includes a helpful display called the "Rhythm EKG" (short "REKG"), indicating the guitar activity of the currently playing song in the upper half and the player's input in the lower half.
The game provides multiple sources of musical instruction via the Legends themselves as well as interactive lessons and videos found in the game's Practice and Shred-U sections. The instructional videos demonstrate core and advanced playing techniques for guitar and bass, and an integrated vocal coach teaches the basics to singers.
Rock Band is a series of rhythm games first released in 2007 and developed by Harmonix.Based on their previous development work from the Guitar Hero series, the main Rock Band games have players use game controllers modeled after musical instruments and microphones to perform the lead guitar, bass guitar, keyboard, drums and vocal parts of numerous licensed songs across a wide range of genres ...
Gitadora (ギタドラ) is a music video game series produced by Konami. [1] The series consists of two games, GuitarFreaks and DrumMania, where players use game controllers modeled after musical instruments to perform the lead guitar, bass guitar and drums of numerous songs across a wide range of genres by matching scrolling musical notes patterns shown on screen.
Guitar Hero Live utilizes a new presentation style incorporating live-action footage from the perspective of the guitarist, rather than 3D stages and characters.. In the game's primary single-player mode, titled GH Live within the game, the player completes songs while experiencing full-motion video taken from the first-person perspective of a band's lead guitarist.
Rocksmith is a music video game produced by Ubisoft, released in October 2011 for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 platforms in North America. Rocksmith was released on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 during September 2012 in Australian [1] and European markets [3] [4] and October 2012 in Japan.
Clone Hero started as a small project of Ryan Foster's in 2011, [2] then called GuitaRPG, built in the XNA engine and bearing simple, 2D graphics. [10] Around 2015, the game's name was changed to Guitar Game to reflect its forking away from the RPG style, and had been upgraded with pseudo-3D graphics made with 2D graphics with warped perspective. [11]
Guitar Hero was initially released to retail stores in a bundle that packaged the game disc and a Gibson SG guitar controller, priced at $69.99. [18] Since its release, stand-alone copies of the games and the guitar controller have been released, including both RedOctane [19] and third-party controllers from TAC [20] and Nyko. [21]