Skip to main content

Guitar Hero is coming back with a new ax to grind

guitar hero live announcement
Image used with permission by copyright holder
After a five year hiatus, Guitar Hero is back with a new ax, a new developer, and a renewed focus on making you feel like a rock star.

Official Guitar Hero® Live Reveal Trailer

DJ Hero developer FreeStyleGames has taken up the series for Guitar Hero Live, coming in fall 2015 to PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Wii U, Xbox 360, Xbox One, phones, and tablets. The mobile version is particularly intriguing, as it promises to be identical to the console release, capable of hooking up to a TV or playing on the go. This will be the first entry in the series since 2010’s Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock.

If video games are about fantasy fulfillment, then Guitar Hero’s appeal has always been for nonmusicians to feel like a rock star. In previous games, that experience was limited to the act of playing the plastic guitar in time with songs. The visuals that accompany the oncoming stream of notes to hit were from the audience perspective, showing your cartoon avatar rocking out in your place. The ethos of Guitar Hero Live is to focus on that fantasy, and build the entire experience around feeling like you’re on stage, playing in front of a live audience. Activision Publishing CEO Eric Hirshberg said that their starting question was whether the game could give you stage fright.

My Chemical Romance's Gerard Way duels with FreeStyleGames' Jamie Jackson while Activision Publishing CEO Eric Hirshberg rocks out nearby
My Chemical Romance’s Gerard Way duels with FreeStyleGames’ Jamie Jackson while Activision Publishing CEO Eric Hirshberg rocks out nearby. Will Fulton/Digital Trends

Songs are now played from a first-person perspective up on stage. The cartoon avatars are gone as well, replaced by live, filmed bandmates and audiences that respond dynamically to how you play. Before each song you start backstage, walking by technicians and groupies. A stern, bearded roadie places the guitar over your neck and gives you a nod of approval before you step on stage to face the crowd. The experience is much more immersive than previous games, down to details like a positional sound design that alters the mix based on where you wander on stage.

Each song was filmed live, so if you’re doing well then the crowd will be singing along. Miss a few too many notes, however, and the crowd will sour, booing and telling you exactly how much you suck. Your band is no less forgiving — as I completely lost my hand position during a chorus, I turned around to see the lead singer fuming and the drummer shooting daggers. Pay close attention to the video and the transitions between a happy and an unhappy crowd are pretty obvious, but as background it’s fantastic feedback.

Beyond just removing the cartoon characters, Guitar Hero Live‘s aesthetic is more elegant across the board. The multicolored buttons and fiery bursts have been replaced with clean graphics, mostly using black, white, and wood texture, like a classic Fender Stratocaster. The redesign extends beyond the in-game visuals and to the guitar controller itself, which is brand new for this edition of the game, though Hirshberg promised it will remain forward-compatible at least through the current console cycle.

It’s finally time to pick up that plastic guitar that’s been gathering dust next to your TV for the last few years and put it in the attic, because FreeStyleGames has redesigned the iconic controller with which Harmonix blew our minds for the PlayStation 2 original in 2005. The size, weight, and feel are familiar, but instead of five colorful buttons in a row, the neck boasts six wood-colored buttons in two rows of three. The goal of the redesign is to simultaneously lower the bar for entry while also raising the skill cap at the higher difficulties. Many people (the author, shamefully, included) choked in previous games at the addition of the fifth button and never progressed past Guitar Hero‘s medium difficulty. The new system aims to smooth out that curve from learning into high-level play. At the easiest level, only the bottom three buttons are used. Increasing the difficulty first adds in the top row, and then more complicated chord shapes that rely on both rows at once.

Guitar Hero Live
Guitar Hero Live’s new axe Image used with permission by copyright holder

Guitar Hero Live also introduces a new gameplay mode, called Guitar Hero TV. It is a network of playable music videos from a wide variety of artists, divided into genre-specific channels. Compete for high scores against both friends and strangers, locally and online. Hundreds of songs will be available at launch, with the promise of more being continually added to the network over time. For the first time in a Guitar Hero or Rock Band game, players will be able to find new music to play, utilizing social media’s tools of sharing and discovery, without having to purchase expansion discs or download individual songs.

The developer did not reveal too much about what music would be available with the game at launch, since it is obviously still an ongoing process, but promised to support a wide range of genres. A few bands cited as already in the game are The Black Keys, My Chemical Romance, and Fall Out Boy, with the lead singers of the latter two making appearances at the reveal event to fumble through their own songs. More details about the game’s set list will no doubt emerge in the coming months leading up to the fall release.

Editors' Recommendations

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Volgarr the Viking 2 will take you back to your Ghosts ‘n Goblins days
A viking slashes a tree in Volgarr the Viking 2.

Developer Digital Eclipse is working on a surprising project: Volgarr the Viking 2. The 2D retro sequel will launch on August 6 for PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch, and PC.

The news is an out of left field reveal. The first Volgarr the Viking game released in 2013 and was made as an ode to 1080s classics like Ghosts 'n Goblins. Despite being a small release, it sold over 1 million copies over the past decade. As revealed during today's Guerrilla Collective stream, the series is coming back with a new sequel by Digital Eclipse, the team behind this year's Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story.

Read more
3 Days of Play PS Plus games to try this weekend (June 7-9)
Key art for Streets of Rage 4.

June 2024 is shaping up to be a pretty great month for PlayStation players. Not only are we coming off an entertaining State of Play showcase, but a new Days of Play initiative surrounding all the video game showcases this month is bringing a lot of new PS Plus additions with it. Many of those games hit PS Plus this week, and three in particular stand out to us.

For owners of Sony's oft-neglected PlayStation VR2, the first game is one of its rare exclusives that take full advantage of the headset's eye-tracking by seeing how often players blink. The next is a new PS Plus Essential game that's a revival of Sega's classic beat-'em-up series for the modern gaming era. Finally, the last title is an atmospheric and eerie fishing game that should entice fans of Lovecraftian horror.
Before Your Eyes

Read more
3 first-party Xbox Game Pass games to try this weekend (June 7-9)
Gears 5 Kait Hero Close Up

Microsoft will hold an Xbox Games Showcase and Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Direct. this Sunday. These shows will provide a much better idea of what to expect from Xbox over the course of the next year or two. That's really needed right now, as Microsoft has struggled to keep online discussions around Xbox positive as it went multiplatform with some games, laid off thousands of developers, and outright shut down the developers of Hi-Fi Rush and Redfall. Based on leaks and my personal expectations for the showcase, there are three games you can play on Xbox Game Pass this weekend to prepare for the event.

The first is the latest first-person shooter in a long-running series by id Software that might be getting a medieval-set spinoff. After that, we have the fifth entry in a sci-fi Xbox series that still looks fantastic on Xbox Series X/S even though it came out in 2019. Finally, you can prepare for Avowed with the latest RPG from Obsidian Entertainment, a satirical sci-fi game where player choice is critical.
Doom Eternal

Read more