Ganon2000 hat geschrieben:Heute hab ich gelesen, dass GH3 auch für PC kommt...
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tafkag hat geschrieben:Ganon2000 hat geschrieben:Heute hab ich gelesen, dass GH3 auch für PC kommt...
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Freakkiller hat geschrieben:tafkag hat geschrieben:Ganon2000 hat geschrieben:Heute hab ich gelesen, dass GH3 auch für PC kommt...
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cynamite.de hat geschrieben:Guitar Hero 3: Finale Zugabe steht fest
Der letzte Song wurde enthüllt.
Der finale Song heißt "The Devil Went Down to Georgia" und stammt ursprünglich vom Album Million Mile Reflections der Charlie Daniels Band aus dem Jahre 1979. Inhaltlich geht's um die alte Geschichte vom Teufel, der mit einem jungen Musiker namens Johnny einen Deal macht: Wenn Johnny den Teufel bei einem Geigen-Wettbewerb schlagen kann, erhält er eine Fidel aus purem Gold. Anderenfalls gehört seine Seele dem Beelzebub.
Der berühmte Titel wurde zahlreiche Male gecovert; für die Guitar-Hero-Version zeichnet Steve Ouimette als Gitarrist verantwortlich, den Gesang übernimmt Chris Powers, der Sänger der Band RAZER.
Of note as well is the fact that Guitar Hero II's focus on extreme shredding over simple yet memorable riffs is even more intense in this sequel. The easy and medium difficulties are as good a starting point as they've ever been (though even they are a smidge more difficult than previous installments), but the curve definitely takes a steep incline when you bump up to hard and expert. The jump in expertise required for each setting is far greater than ever before, and at times it comes across as just too much. As awesome as songs like "One" and "Raining Blood" are, they're so intense that it's unlikely that anyone who didn't get all the way through expert in Guitar Hero II will have a blessed clue what to do with these songs. And then there's that pesky song from extreme power metal group DragonForce, "Through the Fire and Flames." It sounds a little bit like a Dungeons & Dragons dork singing over a tape of the Contra soundtrack that's been thrown in a blender and set to "liquefy," and it is so excruciatingly, arthritis-inflictingly difficult that you'll be thanking your lucky stars it's a bonus song and not something you're required to complete to advance. Regardless, there are enough songs that do require completion that aren't terribly far behind in difficulty level that it might just be enough to scare some people off from finishing expert altogether. There's an old adage along the lines of "You win more friends with accessible fun than you do by breaking people's fingers with a fake guitar." Or something like that. Whatever. The point is that Guitar Hero III feels decidedly geared toward the hardcore Guitar Hero fan, and less for the newcomer.
One particularly interesting addition to this year's game is a co-op career mode. This works much like the single-player career mode, but you can play through with a friend who you can divvy up either lead or rhythm guitar/bass duties with. Co-op play hasn't changed much since last year's game, but this new career progression is a neat idea.
Unfortunately, it's a neat idea that's overly restrictive in practice. For one thing, there are six songs you can unlock only in co-op career, which means that if you don't have a buddy with a second guitar that can come over and spend an afternoon playing, you won't get those songs (at least until someone eventually digs up the "unlock all songs" code for the game). Also, no version of the game ships with a co-op quick-play option. The only way to play cooperatively on a single console is to play in the co-op career mode, and you have to unlock six tiers' worth of songs before you unlock all the available songs. Interestingly enough, there is a launch-day patch for the Xbox 360 version of the game that adds a co-op quick-play option. However, if your 360 isn't connected to Xbox Live, or you happen to buy any other version of the game, you're out of luck at the moment.
Gamespot hat geschrieben:And then there's that pesky song from extreme power metal group DragonForce, "Through the Fire and Flames." It sounds a little bit like a Dungeons & Dragons dork singing over a tape of the Contra soundtrack that's been thrown in a blender and set to "liquefy," and it is so excruciatingly, arthritis-inflictingly difficult that you'll be thanking your lucky stars it's a bonus song and not something you're required to complete to advance.