Skip to main content

Charm the bouncer for a backstage peek at Guitar Hero Live

Official Guitar Hero® Live: Behind the Scenes Trailer
FreeStyleGames has opened its doors to the public for this new, behind-the-scenes trailer for the recently-announced Guitar Hero Live. For their first crack at the series, FreeStyleGames has injected new life and innovative ideas into the groundbreaking franchise that Harmonix started in 2005. Founding creative director, Jamie Jackson, looking for all the world like a tattooed indie rocker himself, leads this preliminary tour through the game’s development, focusing on its three major areas of innovation: the live performances, Guitar Hero TV, and the new, redesigned controller.

Unlike previous Guitar Hero games where the background visuals featured your animated avatar rocking out on stage, Guitar Hero Live instead brings the camera on stage in order to turn the game into an immersive, live-action rock star simulator, augmenting the core mission of playing music with all of the thrills and anxiety that surround a live stage performance.

“What I think you don’t realize as a fan of people is that they’re nervous before they go on stage and they do get a bit of stage fright,” Jackson explained with regards to what FreeStyleGames is aiming to capture. “They don’t know which way it’s gonna go — are the crowd gonna be a good crowd or a bad crowd — and we wanted to try and deliver that and … almost complete the whole Guitar Hero experience.”

Every song in the game’s main mode was recorded with a live band and audience. So that the audience and band can respond dynamically to how well you perform, each song was recorded at least twice (probably even three times–it is not yet clear how many gradations there are between being worshiped as rock god and being driven off with torches and pitchforks). Filling the player’s role in these sessions was a large, mobile camera robot.

While the complicated recording process puts some hard limits on how much content can be put out for the main gameplay mode, Guitar Hero TV will fill in the rest with a huge range of playable music videos across many genres. FreeStyleGames is a music game studio first and foremost, with many of its members also playing in bands, and so it was important to them that the game encompass as wide a range of genres as possible beyond the traditional, guitar-based rock that has always grounded the series. Taking cues from online music services like Spotify and Pandora, Guitar Hero TV will also emphasize music discovery as a way to broaden players’ horizons.

All of FreeStyleGames’ changes to the trappings are exciting, but the studio’s central innovation is the redesigned guitar controller. Along the lines of the game’s general focus on rock star fantasy fulfillment, the new configuration of six buttons in two rows of three gives your fretting hand something to do that’s much closer to the experience of playing a real guitar (or at least an air guitar).

It also, crucially, alters the difficulty curve to allow for both an easier point of entry (no more having to use your pinky) and a higher skill cap at the top levels of play (more buttons and the added depth of a second row means that there are many more possible chord shapes for the game to throw at you.

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…
Ubisoft confirms Assassin’s Creed remakes are in the works
Basim perched on a ledge overlooking Baghdad

In a company interview with CEO Yves Guillemot posted on the Ubisoft website Thursday, the executive reveals that there are remakes of Assassin's Creed games in the works, although he doesn't specify which ones.

"Players can be excited about some remakes, which will allow us to revisit some of the games we've created in the past and modernize them," he says, implying that it could pertain to games made before Odyssey. "There are worlds in some of our older Assassin's Creed games that are still extremely rich."

Read more
Surfaced patent shows what an Xbox streaming console would’ve looked like
An Xbox Series X sits next to both Series S models.

There have been a few Xbox devices that have never come to fruition, one of which was Keystone, a prototype for an affordable game streaming device you could hook up to your TV or monitor. Thanks to a surfaced patent, we've gotten an even closer look at what it would've potentially looked like.

The patent, first spotted by Windows Central, gives us a more complete view of the device. We've previously seen the Keystone in the flesh. Microsoft Gaming head Phil Spencer is known for hiding teases and interesting collectibles on the shelf in his office. In a 2022 X (formerly Twitter) post congratulating Bethesda on Fallout's 25th anniversary, you can see a small white device on the top shelf that's actually a Keystone prototype. Xbox told Digital Trends that it was a version of the device made before it decided to "refocus our efforts on a new approach.”

Read more
Wordle Today: Wordle answer and hints for June 28
Someone playing Wordle on a smartphone.

We have the solution to Wordle on June 28, as well as some helpful hints to help you figure out the answer yourself, right here. We've placed the answer at the bottom of the page, so we don't ruin the surprise before you've had a chance to work through the clues. So let's dive in, starting with a reminder of yesterday's answer.
Yesterday's Wordle answer
Let's start by first reminding ourselves of yesterday's Wordle answer for those new to the game or who don't play it daily, which was "ORDER." So we can say that the Wordle answer today definitely isn't that. Now, with that in mind, perhaps take another stab at it using one of these Wordle starting words and circle back if you have no luck.
Hints for today's Wordle
Still can't figure it out? We have today's Wordle answer right here, below. But first, one more thing: Let's take a look at three hints that could help you find the solution, without giving it away, so there's no need to feel guilty about keeping your streak alive -- you put in some work, after all! Or just keep scrolling for the answer.

Today’s Wordle includes the letter D.
Today’s Wordle uses two vowels.
Today's Wordle can refer to a large number of animals, particularly livestock like cattle or sheep, that are moving together in a group.

Read more