Lots of over acting with a disinterested crowd, lots of head shaking and band members mouthing “come on!” I found myself laughing and surprised at how cruel some of the cast members appeared. When performing well the crowd is excited, the band and crew are giving the player thumbs-up and fist bumps, but if performance starts to slip the screen blurs for a second and fades into view. How well the player performs directly corresponds to one of two videos that occur during a song. This means that for players to actually notice what is happening in the background things have to be exaggerated which is exactly what Guitar Hero: Live does. When playing Guitar Hero Live, the player needs to put most of their attention into barrage of notes flying at them. These live action moments are over the top and incredibly corny but it’s one of the reasons I enjoyed them. The first thing you’ll encounter after syncing the new guitar controller to your console is a live action tutorial explaining the different type of notes you can expect. It would have been nice to have the option to purchase one controller and be able to play it on both mobile and consoles. The guitar controller that works with iOS devices (and eventually Android) will not work with any bluetooth enabled consoles like PS4 or Wii U. If you were hoping to grab the mobile version and use your console guitar, you are also out of luck. So while the same guitar works with both PS4 and XB1, different USB dongles are required. The different consoles require different USB dongles that come included, but specific to each console. There’s also dedicated buttons for activating star power and popping back to the Guitar Hero: TV menu. It has a sturdy feel and the fret buttons are wide enough to easily achieve accurate finger placement while still narrow enough for smaller hands. While the new guitar does take a while to adjust to, pulling off tricky segments had me feeling like I was solving difficult, rapid fire puzzles. Note charts includes bar chords, holding both the white and black frets in a single column, frets in the same row (all black or all white). The top row indicates the note board with white guitar picks pointing up while the bottom is black pointing down. Whereas previous games in the series used controllers and mechanics nearly identical to Rock Band, GH:L has players using two rows of three buttons each, for finger placement emulating movement and placement of playing real guitar on a much closer level. Guitar Hero: Live went in a new direction with its six button guitar. Platforms: XB1, PS4, Wii U, iOS, PS3, 360 Guitar Hero: Live forces players to use six buttons instead of five, and offers players new ways to enjoy the fake instrument genre.
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