Guitar Hero: World Tour (Solo Guitar Pack) (Xbox 360)

Release Date: 07/11/2008

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Guitar Hero: World Tour for Xbox 360 - with Guitar!

Delivering the largest on-disc set list in a music-rhythm game to-date, Guitar Hero: World Tour for Xbox 360 is comprised entirely of master recordings from some of the greatest classic and modern rock bands of all-time including Van Halen, Linkin Park, The Eagles, Sublime and many more. Additionally, Guitar Hero: World Tour for Xbox 360 offers significantly more localised downloadable music than ever before on all of the next-generation consoles. Budding rock stars will also be given creative license to fully customise everything in Guitar Hero: World Tour for Xbox 360, from their characters' appearance and instruments to their band's logo and album covers.

  • Developer:
  • Publisher: Activision
Reviews

Game Reviews

The King of rock 'n' roll?

Rock Band may have ruled the rhythm-action roost for the past few months, but the series that started the trend for peripheral-based music games has returned in a big way. Compatible with all the old Guitar Hero guitars, the game-only version of Guitar Hero World Tour works as a straight-up sequel for those who just want to get their strum on. But it's the big band experience - available via the Band Bundle package - where the amps really get turned up to 11.

Kitted out

Red Octane has always created great guitar controllers but the one provided with Guitar Hero World Tour is comfortably its best to date, with longer strum and whammy bars, an additional Star Power button for the tilt-averse, and a touch-sensitive lower portion of the neck which enables you to slide and tap without strumming, for those pyrotechnic solos.

The tracklist is thrillingly eclectic - eschewing obvious choices in favour of some wild new challenges.

Meanwhile, the Guitar Hero World Tour drumkit is a masterpiece of engineering - a solid, sturdy, six-input set with rubber pads that provide a pleasing bounce when hit. It's also much quieter than Rock Band's offering, while the two raised cymbals make it feel closer to the real thing. The pads are also velocity-sensitive, meaning particularly hefty thwacks during breaks and fills will no doubt have the neighbours complaining. Or coming round to jam!

Thrillingly eclectic

Budding vocalists will be pleased to hear that they're also catered for in Guitar Hero World Tour, with a USB microphone doing its job more than efficiently and a mechanic that will be familiar to anyone who's played Sony's SingStar. World Tour is more forgiving, but then vocals are likely to be the one part of your game you'll struggle to improve.

The Guitar Hero World Tour tracklist is thrillingly eclectic - eschewing obvious choices in favour of some wild new challenges. You'll find REM and Oasis for the pop kids, while metal heads get to rock out with At The Drive-In and indie lovers can shoegaze to Dinosaur Jr. Though the less familiar songs aren't ideal for the full band experience, discovering new favourite tunes has always been part of the series' appeal.

casual gamers are well-served with the introduction of a Beginner mode which allows you to hit any button or press any pad to succeed.

Newcomers and casual gamers are well-served with the introduction of a Beginner mode which allows you to hit any button or press any pad to succeed: as long as you're in time, you'll pass. That's not to say that the series' hardcore roots have been ignored - the Expert difficulty setting in Guitar Hero World Tour offers a huge challenge, even to seasoned veterans.

The customisation options are plentiful - you can change anything from the facial hair and tattoos on your cartoonish avatar through to the design of your band's logo. And for the dedicated, Guitar Hero World Tour features a Studio mode which enables you to create your own tracks (but no vocals) and share with other players via the GHTunes service. It's dauntingly complex at first, but it's safe to say the feature will likely breed a substantial online community over the coming months.

Rock on

Perhaps most importantly, the note charts have been significantly improved over those in the disappointing Guitar Hero III - you'll rarely find yourself playing any phantom notes which aren't in the real song this time around. With Rock Band 2 just around the corner, developer Neversoft needed to raise its game, and it has - providing some serious competition to Harmonix in the battle of the bands.

GAME's Verdict
plus points
  • Well-designed instruments.
  • Great tracklist.
  • Exciting new modes and options.
minus points
  • Some may find the song list too eccentric.
  • The Studio mode is incredibly daunting.
  • Note charts - though improved - aren't quite Rock Band quality.

Review by: Keith 'Hi-hat' Stuart
Version Tested: X360
Review Published: 07.10.08

User Reviews

Ashley Sparkes posted on 30 Dec 2008
its amazing
david moores posted on 28 Dec 2008
this game is absolutley mint the 3rd one was awsome people who dont have this is really weird
Daniel Hough posted on 18 Dec 2008
Each instrument are compatible with Rock Band 2. They have own careers so you can 100% the Guitar Career. Instruments . Great game but could of been made better. Good.. Some of the Set list, containing Hot for Teacher, Assassin, Our truth, Crazy Train and so on.... A more sharper and clear looking in game interface. Guitar parts where you strum notes while holding a sustain. Open note to the bass which makes things more interesting but I have a bad point for this which I'll mention I'm 50/50 with bass parts. Live battle of the Bands. Bad parts, horrible timing on notes, you could hit a note just before it starts to head to the bottom of the screen. (I am calibrated by the way) Purple lines are horrible it look at in game play imo. Personally I think they made a dramatic add-on for bass and drums. 6 notes instead of 5. Band play is awful for star power, takes 1 bulb per activation, hard to activate at once. Instruments not up to quality (Like the RB1 release) I'm using RB2 stuff.
Alex Fower posted on 13 Dec 2008
I was wondering, if you just by the guitar, no drums or mic. would the career mode just be guitar mode, or to finish the career mode 100%ly (lol), would to have to finish it with drums and mic as well? thanks.
Huw JEnkins posted on 01 Dec 2008
this is an amazing game but i advise gettin the super bunfle, it costs more but the drums and the mic are so much fun. you can buy a mic seperatly but you cant get drums right now and they will cost about £60-70 and it will be cheaper to vuy the super bundle. its so much fun with the mic because you can sing while playing the drums and/or guitar!!! the slap bass is incredible and fits really well. buy the full bundle because when your friends come over it is so fun!!! overall awsome and definatly worth buying
1 - 5 of 10 Reviews

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