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So Guitar Hero IV, aka Guitar Hero World Tour, had to come up with a band of its own. And the developers did it in spades rolling out a six-piece drum kit with two raised cymbals, a snare, and two ...
Still, “World Tour” continues “Guitar Hero’s” tradition of bringing together a broad variety of top rocks songs from the ’60s through to modern day.
World Tour has toned down some of the more over-the-top character models from Guitar Hero 3, but the color palate and venues remain outlandish. You'll play in skeleton-lined metal havens, frat ...
Guitar Hero: World Tour First look. We get our first look at Guitar Hero's foray into the multi-instrument scene, including a glance at the surprisingly deep song-creation process.
Activision has released the entire track listing for their upcoming upgrade to the Guitar Hero franchise, Guitar Hero World Tour. Rock Band 2 might have shown their hand a bit early, as Activision ...
Guitar Hero World Tour’s drum kit rewrites the book. The raised cymbals allow you to carry off ultra-realistic (and thrilling!) drum rolls and fills.
Guitar Hero World Tour is now official for a Fall of 2008 release thanks to a press release making it so. As our friends at Kotaku have pointed out, ...
Guitar Hero World Tour is a fun title, to be sure, but it's also a disappointment in a lot of respects. A number of things it tries to accomplish were already done better in Rock Band, which ...
As revealed over the weekend, Guitar Hero World Tour features over 85 songs ranging from modern hits such as "The Kill" by 30 Seconds To Mars to classics like “Hotel California” by The Eagles.
Guitar Hero World Tour combines state-of-the-art wireless controllers in. new online* and offline gameplay modes and a Music Studio feature that lets. you compose, record, ...
Guitar Hero: World Tour comes in a big, heavy box. There are multiple Hero games coming out in the coming months. That means it's time for sales to move product! GameStop already had its big Rock ...
Guitar Hero World Tour Review That's one giant leap for a franchise, one small step for a genre. By Aaron Thomas on November 5, 2008 at 12:16PM PST.