Guitar Hero branches out for its fourth core installment by adding drums and vocals to the mix, as well as allowing us to unleash our own musical creations upon the world via its in-built music studio.
Available on:
PC
,
Wii
,
PS2
,
Xbox 360,
PS3
Genre: Other Games/Compilations Release date: October 28, 2008 Published by: Activision Developed by: Neversoft
wat i cant stand a bout this (and rock band) is that, as a REAL musician, i am not really doing anything. On actual drums, which i hav been playing years before rock band, i have much more fun playing these songs than in the game. the game itself is not horrible and i admit sometimes fun
but people who beleive they are getting something musiclly out of this game. especially for drummers, there is more competition between the drummers that are good and REAL, and the ones that think they can drum and have never been behind an actual drum set. some people are spending too much time at a TV/Computer screen and their brains hav turned to mush.
We’re spilling the beans on the hardest-rocking game on the planet!
Sep 02, 2008
Los Angeles may be a town known for the highest excesses of rock n’ roll debauchery (with legendarily wayward rock acts such as Mötley Crüe and Guns N’ Roses synonymous with the city) but Activision’s headquarters – a dull grey box located in sleepy Santa Monica – is hardly the most thrilling place in the world to get our hands on with Guitar Hero World Tour for the first time.
» Read Full Guitar Hero World Tour preview
We’re going to party like it’s 1984. With Guitar Hero World Tour, the latest all-singing, all finger-tapping edition of the Guitar Hero franchise aims to deliver the party vibe. This year’s game is about the social experience of joining together to rock… so let’s jump! Why the Van Halen references? Because they’re just one of the new bands confirmed as exclusive to Guitar Hero World Tour, others include
» Read Full Guitar Hero World Tour preview
ESRB Rating
Guitar Hero World Tour is rated: Teen
Lyrics,
Mild Suggestive Themes