Guitar hero world tour guitar strings
The idea is sound, but the implementation looks horrifically complicated and technical. I didn't get to play around with the create-a-track mode but, from what I saw at the press conference and heard from Brian Bright, this was probably for the best. Between the buttons being flush with the fretboard, the feel of the strum bar and the overall design, it's still my number one choice. I may be in the minority here, but I still prefer the Rock Band guitar. The World Tour guitar's whammy bar has also been improved, making it far more resistant. A pretty pointless addition, unless you're using it to palm-mute notes in the song creator. Moving your hand into position at such short notice is guaranteed to put you off.Īnother new addition is the star power button, which is long and thin and is activated with your palm, in case you're feeling to lazy to tilt your controller. A pretty decent idea, but in practice it suffers from the same problems that the Rock Band's guitar does with its solo buttons. On certain note sequences you can slide your finger along the strip, making it feel more like sliding up and down a guitar string. The new guitar has a few extra features, like the touch panel strip. It's the same design and feels almost identical. World Tour's drum set is definitely preferable to Rock Band's overall, though this is only in comparison to the original set, not the forthcoming model - and certainly not the premium ION set.Īs for the guitar, if you have Guitar Hero III, then you already know how the instrument plays. The one issue I faced continuously was my sticks getting stuck underneath the cymbals at times, but this is no doubt fixable by adjusting the heights of the pads. It wasn't until midway through the first song that a blue (middle of the lower tier) note appeared, but it spun me for a loop. Having five drums, rather than four, also takes some getting used to. Not hearing the constant thok, thok is definitely preferable too, as anyone who has bought silencing pads for their Rock Band drums will know.
With Rock Band, the bounce seems to come more from the way the sticks are held, rather than out of the structural nature of the pads.
The drums are a lot bouncier than the Rock Bandones, making them not only quieter, but more fun to play. The two-tier structure with the cymbals feels great, but can be slightly confusing at first. It took a little while to get used to the drums.
The star power meter, along with the rock meter, is kept in the top left, which means that if you're playing drums or bass guitar, it's not very easy to see. "Hang on a minute," I thought as I played Guitar Hero: World Tour at Activision's booth at the Leipzig Games Convention, "Isn't this Rock Band?" The layout on the World Tour screen is almost identical to Harmonix's series, with the guitars on either side, the drums scrolling down the middle (with the same horizontal bars displaying bass notes, except in World Tour they're purple, not orange) and the vocals on top.