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Rock Band Review

PlayStation 3 Xbox 360 ntsc-us Import Review by Tom Bramwell

13 December, 2007

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Are you ready to rock? Again? With more peripherals? Of course you are. But is it as good as it obviously should be?

Rock Band is the most ambitious music game ever. You can sing, you can play guitar and you can drum, but most importantly you can get some friends round and do all three at once - with a fourth role for a bass player if you decide to buy a second guitar peripheral.

The initial reaction is that each discipline could stand up as its own game. Guitar-playing is a natural evolution of Guitar Hero: you still hold the fret button specified and strum as it passes through a bar at the bottom of the screen, and you can build up star power (sorry, "Overdrive") by playing certain sequences of highlighted notes flawlessly and then holding the neck aloft. But now you can also drop your left hand to a quintet of smaller frets closer to the body of the guitar to dance your fingers through complicated solos, and occasionally songs end with an unscripted finale that encourages you to cram in as much thrashing as possible before ending on a particular chord.

Vocals, meanwhile, replicate the SingStar approach. As lyrics scroll past, an undulating line illustrates the pitch and rhythm and a small arrow indicates whether you're above or below it as you croon into the bundled microphone. Unlike SingStar, though, you're sometimes asked to tap the microphone head at specified intervals as though it were a tambourine, and you're able to activate a points-multiplier by shouting during periods of inactivity.

Inevitably the drums are the biggest novelty. Most people who splurge the USD 170 on Rock Band (the UK price is still to be determined) will have experienced Guitar Hero, and if not SingStar then probably Karaoke Revolution, but games like DrumMania are still Japanese-only oddities for console owners and fleeting pleasures for people who still brave the arcades. Rock Band supplies a four-pad drum-set with a kick-pedal, and offers a Guitar Hero-esque control system: as icons move down a familiar fret-bar, you smash the corresponding drum in time, reaching for the kick-pedal when faced with a yellow line under all four frets.

'Rock Band' Screenshot 1

The screen loads up with icons and information, but it's never all that difficult to follow.

Played alone, there's a solo mode for each instrument, where you unlock songs in groups of five, and in a nice touch Harmonix has arranged the tracks in a different order for each discipline, reflecting the differing scales of difficulty. Played co-operatively with one, two or three other people, however, the screen fills comfortably with displays and the performance is more satisfying for its multiple facets. You feed off each other's energy during verses and choruses, strutting and grinning as spells of inactivity provide an opportunity to observe your band-mates caning plastic.

The track listing is unsurprisingly epic and crowd-pleasing. You might expect that from music industry super-giant MTV, which now owns developer Harmonix, but if your comparison is Guitar Hero then the reason is simpler than a change of pay-scales: these are songs designed to appeal whatever the instrument, rather than guitar specialties. There are 45 licensed tracks in the box, along with 13 bonus songs of less repute, and you're unlikely to encounter a friend who doesn't smile at more than a few. Radiohead, Bowie, Nirvana, the Chilli Peppers, Foo Fighters, Metallica, The Pixies, Weezer, Beastie Boys, Bon Jovi - most are huge names, and even the contemporary choices are pretty well judged, including the likes of OK Go and The Killers.

As usual, there's a scale of difficulty that should open the game up to anyone. Plastic-guitarists with experience can go straight to Hard or Expert and rip through power-chords and complicated solos, and the SingStar-esque reliance on pitch and rhythm rather than specific octaves opens that side of the game up considerably too. New-coming drummers may need more time to adjust, but there are sensible concessions there too: the kick-pedal is important to learn quickly, but the game initially plays to the beginner's natural impulse to combine a foot movement with a drumming motion, leaving room for improvement.

If your intention is to form a group with your friends and play together regularly, then Rock Band is simply brilliant. Band World Tour, where Harmonix has spent most of its time, allows you to assemble in your living room and tour a virtual world, creating custom rock personas, playing in dozens of venues and building up fan-base, cash and rewards. It uses specific challenges, double-or-nothing sets and unpredictable playlists to keep things interesting.

'Rock Band' Screenshot 2

You can customise characters, as you'd expect. You can also unilaterally split the band up and delete entire careers when Kristan goes to the shop.

It also does a good job of getting you to play together. There are team Overdrives, Unity Phrases that involve everyone perfecting a sequence at once (except the vocalist, who can mop brows or spark up a Marlboro or something), and Overdrive can also be used to rescue team-mates. Sorry, band mates. You ride together, you die together. Especially since you can't continue to make progress after a certain point unless everyone (including the rubbish drummer) has graduated to a higher difficulty level. Practice is the order of the day, and practice together is best, since you often benefit from mapping out where best to use Overdrive.

As usual, the crowd goes wild in the background as you play (and even sings along nowadays when you're doing particularly well), and while Harmonix obviously couldn't re-use Guitar Hero's charming visual style, the alternative proposed here is classy and likeable. Characters have the same customisability, and background stage shows are more detailed - presented in slightly grainy fashion, with lots of neat visual flourishes like a body-mounted guitar view to frame finger movements. Venues and characters compare favourably to the developer's earlier work, and the loading screen slogans are no longer played for laughs, instead offering trivia. There are only so many Spinal Tap quotes you can use, after all.

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Comments: 1-50 of 72 in total | next 50 »

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mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 11:33
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Something I feel I should add from my personal few hours worth of experience with the PS3 version of the game (and one other staffer here mentioned this as well) is a small amount of slowdown on occasion. Not really sure what triggers it, and it only lasts a few seconds, but as you can imagine with a game like this, it's incredibly unwelcome.
fatchris [staff]
13/12/07 @ 11:36
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I've been playing Rock Band at the office this week and as a fan of Guitar Hero II and III, I was so excited that I'd been annoying Tom about bringing it in.
The review sums up how I found it, but I have a few things to add:

- A couple of us have noticed a few moments of slow-down during the game, which is noticeable when you're relying on the rhythm.

- The lower fret buttons take some getting used to, but are really satisfying. However, the time it takes to switch from the higher fret can cost you greatly when the solo is fast, as even the smallest amount of time misses loads of notes.

- There are a bunch of songs that most people won't know (or at least won't know well). This is fine for Guitar and Drums, but it's not for singing - you simply can't sing along to a song you don't know.

- In Guitar Hero, I hold down the strum bar when a note is meant to be held - this doesn't work in Rock Band and often causes the note to cut out. It took me a while to work out what was going wrong.

- The guitar is too easy and I can breeze through the early songs on Expert, first time.


Amazing fun though :D
Der_tolle_Emil
13/12/07 @ 11:43
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Sounds fun. I am especially interested in the drums.

About the additional fret buttons on the guitar? Do you actually have to use them or are they just as the 'standard' buttons and their only purpose is to add a bit to the immersion? If you have to use them, how do they work with the GH2 or GH3 guitars which come without those additional buttons?

And any info on getting the drums stand alone? I already have two guitars from GH2 and GH3 and I don't need yet another one and I'm not keen on that mic either.
mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 11:44
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On the solo fret buttons: no, you don't have to use them. They're just a fun extra. You can still do the solos with the normal frets / strum bar combo.
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 11:46
DDevil
13/12/07 @ 11:53
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I think the only thing that that'll stop me buying this is the price. If it's anywhere near £170 it's a no sale. £100 would be pushing it to be honest!
Killerbee
13/12/07 @ 11:53
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I can see this being great in student houses or for anyone who can regularly rely on getting lots of friends over to play, but for gamers who mostly play on their own, I'd go for Guitar Hero.

I'd also be concerned about where on earth I'd store the peripherals...
mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 11:54
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Better forget it then DDevil. No chance it'll be less than £150.
symbiote
13/12/07 @ 12:03
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Join a real band, nerds
monkie_king
13/12/07 @ 12:06
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funny about the levels being off for the drums. guess they need to support headsets for individual in-ear-monitor mixes, or maybe a way to gesture at the mixing desk between songs.

also, i'm a bit disappointed that the upper frets just replicate the lower ones -- when i first saw the Rock Band guitar i thought we were in for some Eddie van Halen-style tapping antics.
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 12:09
ProdigyBE_OPM
13/12/07 @ 12:06
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Symbiote: LOL!
billythekid
13/12/07 @ 12:15
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I believe that when you use the extra fret buttons you don't need to strum.
fatchris [staff]
13/12/07 @ 12:18
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monkie_king: They don't exactly replicate the upper frets. On the lower you don't need to strum, so it changes quite a lot. It's cool!

I also thought about having individual headphones because even on the guitar, it's difficult to hear when someone is singing next to you.
Yaster
13/12/07 @ 12:26
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"Join a real band, nerds"

This is exactly what I thought when I first heard about RB. It's ok playing a Karaoke game which scores you on how well you sing and Guitar Hero is mildly acceptable but a game which places you and 3 of your mates in a band set up where you're all playing pretend instruments in unison just does not appeal to me.

But if you're mad psyched for this then all the more power to you but just remember, every second you and your mates spend playing this is wasted when you could be playing in a real band practicing your own songs every night chasing attention from record companies. You'll still have enough time to play your generic FPS in your spare time.
HairyArse [mod]
13/12/07 @ 12:27
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Mouse - it's funny you should mention the slowdown because it's also apparent in GH3 which was surprising as I certainly didn't ever notice it in 1 or 2.

Is Rock Band fun to play single player? From the reviews and previews I've read, my biggest concern is that it's ace if you have friends round all prepared to join in, but if you're most likely to be playing by yourself it's not as satisfying as Guitar Hero.

Finally, I'm really excited about Rock Band but have a feeling that I'm gonna struggle to get people to actually sing. Any suggestions other than get everyone pissed?
Hog-lumps
13/12/07 @ 12:29
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Is there a tracklisting for this anywhere?

edit. scrap that, I found it here; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_son...

There's some good tunes on there!
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 12:31
flaming.elk
13/12/07 @ 12:36
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@Yaster

Why is the time wasted? Sure I could spend my Friday night sat on my own doing scale training, or I could join my non-instrument playing house mates and play Rock Band. I guess I could make them all learn an instrument and then wait for 3 years. Shame you can't turn a real guitar down to medium.
Wendelius
13/12/07 @ 12:40
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"Apparently there will be a patch for online Band World Tour, but that's not much use right now."

I believe that "patch" will be called Rock Band 2. Didn't the devs say a while ago that that was too big to simply patch in?

Hope I'm wrong.

Wendelius
MBar
13/12/07 @ 12:41
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Wow, Yaster, I didn't realise it was so easy.

Also: Shut up.
Yaster
13/12/07 @ 12:43
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@MBar

You can always dream

Also: you seem to take a lot of offense from something someone on the internet says
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 12:46
mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 12:45
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I don't see a problem with people pouring their time into Guitar Hero or Rock Band; it isn't a substitute for being in a real band. It's nothing like being in a real band; it's very very different, and that's why it's not pointless. It's just an arcade game about high scores with novel controllers. These instruments don't equate to playing or mastering their real life counterparts - the latter is a shitload more difficult, time consuming and expensive, and in many respects being in an actual band is a lot less fun.
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 12:45
Waldo
13/12/07 @ 12:49
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But if you're mad psyched for this then all the more power to you but just remember, every second you and your mates spend playing this is wasted when you could be playing in a real band practicing your own songs every night chasing attention from record companies.

Typical tiresome response; I guess it never occurred to you that not everyone has the time, inclination, talent, or available funds to start a "real" band.
Bumhug360
13/12/07 @ 12:51
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Bah useless if you have no mates, they should release a version with a dance mat instead of a drum kit and call it One Man Rock Band
NewYork
13/12/07 @ 12:56
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3 less than I was expecting.
w00t
13/12/07 @ 13:08
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"every second you and your mates spend playing this is wasted when you could be playing in a real band practicing your own songs every night chasing attention from record companies"

This is exactly what I thought when I first heard about comments on Eurogamer. It's ok writing a rebuke to a favoured method of fun and insulting people is mildly acceptable but a commenting system where lots of people are typing in unison just does not appeal to me.

But if you're mad psyched for this then all the more power to you but just remember, every second you and your mates spend typing this is wasted when you could be typing in a real word processor practicing your own stories every night chasing attention from publishing companies. You'll still have enough time to wwrite your shopping list in your spare time.
udat
13/12/07 @ 13:10
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"3 less than I was expecting."

Heh...

If this game was out before xmas I would be all over it, but if it shows up afterwards I think I will wait for the sequel. Not sure why it's not available yet, I almost bought it when I was in the USA in Nov.
monkie_king
13/12/07 @ 13:13
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Remember, every second you waste playing Tekken you could be out there in the street punching strangers in the face.
retrend
13/12/07 @ 13:15
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lol, as if spending your time in a real band is any more useful than spending ur time playing computer games. and i seriously doubt in the 20-40hours/gameplay there is in this that if you invested that time into learning to be a band with your m8s, you would manage to even get a single gig in.
monkie_king
13/12/07 @ 13:19
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it also assumes that everyone who might play Rock Band is even remotely interested in playing in a real band.

i'm not sure why these music games always attract such comments. you don't see people slagging off Pro Evo because you could be running around on a muddy field in real life.

(actually, i do know why: it's an attention seeking device based on the idea that playing musical instrument makes a person interesting and special).
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 13:22
MBar
13/12/07 @ 13:36
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Agreed with monkie_king. Apparently these people think we give a damn that they play "real" guitar.

It's just another brand of elitism.
retrend
13/12/07 @ 13:40
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haha, as if playing guitar is in any way hard, i dont know if you have noticed, but about 1million times more people can play guitar than have ever heard of guitar hero or rock band.
Vermillion3000
13/12/07 @ 13:44
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Nice review though.
It's refreshing to hear anything about RB that's obviously positive but doesn't make it sound like the second coming of Jesus/Gandalf/Captain America. Well done Tom for keeping feet on ground and head away from own arse.
Edited 1 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 13:44
Ceatlan
13/12/07 @ 13:48
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Once you can buy a version of this for less money without the guitar or microphone I'll get it. I'm not interested in the singing at all and I'd rather use my GH guitar, so until I can get it with just the drums I'm not interested.
tufty
13/12/07 @ 13:50
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I've had it for a couple of weeks and I'm really enjoying it. For single player, it is like Guitar Hero, Drum Hero and Singing Hero rolled into one, and if you are into drumming, it is worth it for that alone (at least at crazy USD prices!). The band tour is even better because of the "tour" and growth aspect.

I am no GH expert, and I can see the difficulty in RB is easier, so you might want to move onto the drums and give the girlfriend/boyfriend/mate the guitar.

Haven't done the singing much - you need to know the songs to do that, so I'm learning them on the other instruments first.

Overall, a fun time, with presentation that is a quantum leap ahead of Guitar Hero.
3william56
13/12/07 @ 13:56
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Is no-one going to put Radiohead's Anyone Can Play Guitar on one of these games, and crank up the difficulty for extra irony points?
Gartt
13/12/07 @ 13:58
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lmao, Timmy and the Lords of the Underworld on the bonus tracks, thats almost as class as strongbaad in GH2
black2
13/12/07 @ 14:13
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"Singing to a video game is totally gay."

Yes, but the good kind.
McBradders
13/12/07 @ 14:14
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To be honest this poops on GH from a great height, but then even though, direct comparisons are a little silly. One is focused on the guitar, the other... isn't.
tonynibbles
13/12/07 @ 14:15
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I'm enjoying it - though tbh it can be a bit boring.

The feeling you get from wanking out those massively long rub-me-like-a-rubber-duck guitar solos from spandex-lycra-tight-hairspray-mental 80's rock gems simply can't be beaten by Rock Bands trying-to-be-oh-so-cool 'down with the kids' tracklisting.

For me, the pinnacle of GH was the uber-cheese awesome riifs of Guitar Hero Rocks the 80's - where it multiplied the joy first found in #1 - that feeling of 'actually playing a guitar'.

Rock Band - Its just a bit too serious at times.

The fun of SingStar PS3 and its awesome community features wins over for me at the moment and I have not played Rock Band since last Friday...

Edited 2 times, most recently on 13/12/07 @ 14:17
spidermanalf
13/12/07 @ 14:16
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Where are pics of the kit?
axman303
13/12/07 @ 14:34
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If you can play this game without feeling a crushing sense of embarrassment, you have achieved a state of total humiliation without realizing it.
jimbob101
13/12/07 @ 14:36
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"What's more, you can't simply pick up the game and play any track as a group until you've unlocked them - either in Band World Tour or one of the solo modes - which limits the game's appeal as a casual party activity until you've done so."

Stupid stupid developers! When will they bloody learn.
darc
13/12/07 @ 14:51
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The comments re: real musicians' reaction to Guitar Hero etc are hysterical and pretty much on the money. :) So it's kind of embarrassing to ask this: are the drum charts sensible enough that a few (dozen) hours of play would serve as training for playing real drums? I don't mean enough to make a "proper" drummer out of someone, but enough that someone would get a hang of the kick, hat, snare routine, and maybe some effective fills, and be able to back up a real band with a set of pads and a sampler? Seems like a small step from one to the other really, and "real" drummers are, on average, hard to find.
mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 14:55
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Well, experience with a real drum kit definitely makes Rock Band a lot easier, but I'm not so sure about it working the other way. The hand positions aren't the same, for a start, and it doesn't give you any training for working the hi-hat with your left foot. At best it'll help you get to grips with basic rock rhythms, but not actual drumming techniques.
Tricky
13/12/07 @ 14:57
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@tonynibbles - you might not have played Rock Band since last Friday, but you've been using the instruments in one of your videos for Singstar ;-)
Skeptopotamus
13/12/07 @ 15:06
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"The hand positions aren't the same, for a start, and it doesn't give you any training for working the hi-hat with your left foot. At best it'll help you get to grips with basic rock rhythms, but not actual drumming techniques."

I can imagine lots of people playing Rock Band drums, thinking "cool, I can play real drums now!" then being totally flummoxed that the right tom doesn't sound like a hi-hat at all! Gadzooks!

Depending on how rigid the note window is, it could improve someone's timing though.
Rodigee
13/12/07 @ 15:26
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Why you should, or shouldn't, buy Rock Band:

Yes, that's me singing.

Fast forward to 2:20 if you're impatient.
Mike1980
13/12/07 @ 15:37
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I'm surprised The White Stripes aren't on the track list. I would have thought that the stuff you get with the game is perfect for their songs (ie. no bass).
mouse [staff]
13/12/07 @ 15:45
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The drumming wouldn't be challenging enough :)
AliRay
13/12/07 @ 15:51
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Back to the drumming: I heard that you don't play any of the cymbal sounds in any of the songs, is this true?

If so:

1) This will never get you ready to back a real band (every good fill NEEDS to end on a cymbal!)

2) Will f*ck things up for anyone who actually can play the drums, esp. if they know the songs, where the cymbals come in, etc
Shabtai
13/12/07 @ 15:53
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Can the RB guitar be used to play GH3 too? I know it works the other way around.

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