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Posts Tagged ‘Guitar Hero’

PSA: Portal guns are for trained professionals only

March 10th, 2010 No comments

You know, we always thought GLaDOS ran the Portal simulation just so she could discover the true value of friendship, but it may really have been in the name of public service. In the video after the break — created by Freddie Wong, who you probably recognize from his ridiculous (and hilarious) Guitar Hero video — we get a glimpse at the likely ramifications of improper Portal gun training and how a few apathetic “friends” can ruin one of the most exciting experiences ever. And here, all this time, we thought GLaDOS was the bad guy!

Note: For those of you who spot that weird frame at the end of the video — yep, with all that gibberish — don’t bother to decipher it. It’s apparently just another gag from Freddie and “friends.” Yuk-yuk-yuk.

Continue reading PSA: Portal guns are for trained professionals only

JoystiqPSA: Portal guns are for trained professionals only originally appeared on Joystiq on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 23:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PlayStation 2 | RedOctane closed by Activision?

February 12th, 2010 No comments

Original Guitar Hero shop named as the latest casualty in publisher’s sweeping cuts; Van Halen developer also shuttered.

Get the full article at GameSpot


PlayStation 2 | RedOctane closed by Activision?” was posted by Brendan Sinclair on Fri, 12 Feb 2010 11:52:50 -0800

PlayStation Store Update: The Heavy Rain Demo Is Here Edition [North America]

February 12th, 2010 No comments

Intrigued by the prospect of Heavy Rain? Still not sold by our review of the story-driven PlayStation 3 adventure? Then download the demo, which leads this week’s North American PlayStation Store update.

The decision to download or not to download has been made easier for you by this week’s additions. It’s largely comprised of new PSOne Classics, PSP demos and new special offer bundles of previously released games and DLC. If you really feel like pissing some money away, you can download new Soul Packs for Dante’s Inferno, this week’s disposable downloadable content.

For the full, long list of new additions, read on.

Games & Demos for PlayStation 3
Valkyria Chronicles “Love Conquers All” Bundle ($9.99)
Heavy Rain demo
PSone Classics: Dirt Jockey ($5.99)
PSone Classics: Populous: The Beginning ($5.99)
PSone Classics: Sim Theme Park ($5.99)

Games & Demos for PSP
Crazy Taxi & Full Auto 2 “Driving Me Crazy” Bundle ($19.99)
Sonic Rivals “Set My Pulse Racing” Bundle ($29.99)
PSP minis: Spaceball: Revolution ($4.99)
echoshift demo
SOCOM: Fireteam Bravo 3 demo

Add-ons & Expansions
Burnout Paradise Complete Downloadable Content Bundle ($19.99)
Sonic Unleashed “Unleash Your Desire” Bundle ($11.99)
Valkyria Chronicles “Love Conquers All” Bundle ($9.99)
LittleBigPlanet Valentine’s Day Mini-Pack ($2.99)
LittleBigPlanet Chinese New Year Costume (free)
Blazblue: Calamity Trigger Other Unlimited Characters Unlocked ($4.99)
Blazblue: Calamity Trigger Additional Character Colors (x6) ($1.99 each)
Blazblue: Calamity Trigger All Additional Colors 2 ($4.99)
Blazblue: Calamity Trigger All Additional Colors 3 ($4.99)
Dante’s Inferno Free Soul Pack (free)
Dante’s Inferno Small Soul Pack ($0.99)
Dante’s Inferno Medium Soul Pack ($1.99)
Dante’s Inferno Large Soul Pack ($3.99)
Dark Void Survivor Missions ($4.99)
Fairytale Fights Treasure Pack 1 (free)
NBA Live 10 All-Star Weekend Pack (free)

Guitar Hero 5 tracks

  • “Until The End” by Breaking Benjamin ($1.99)
  • “Sooner or Later” by Breaking Benjamin ($1.99)
  • “Give Me A Sign” by Breaking Benjamin ($1.99)
  • Breaking Benjamin Track Pack ($5.49) – “Sooner or Later”, “Until The End”, and “Give Me A Sign” by Breaking Benjamin

Rock Band tracks

  • “Holy Wars… The Punishment Due” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Hangar 18″ by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Take No Prisoners” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Five Magics” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Poison Was the Cure” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Lucretia” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Tornado of Souls” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Dawn Patrol” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • “Rust in Peace… Polaris” by Megadeth ($1.99)
  • Rust in Peace (Album)- Megadeth ($14.99) – “Holy Wars… The Punishment Due,” “Hangar 18,” “Take No Prisoners,” “Five Magics,” “Poison Was the Cure,” “Lucretia,” “Tornado of Souls,” “Dawn Patrol,” and “Rust in Peace… Polaris” by Megadeth

Game Videos
The Tester Preview Episode
White Knight Chronicles IE Launch Trailer
Heavy Rain Gameplay Engine Trailer
After Burner Climax Announcement Network Trailer
Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce Hd Up Close #1 Network Trailer
Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce Hd Up Close #2 Network Trailer
Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce Hd Up Close #3 Network Trailer
Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce Hd Up Close #4 Network Trailer
Just Cause 2: Grapple Documentary Video
Army of Two: The 40th Day “World Tour”

Themes & Wallpapers
Flower Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
WipEout HD Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Trash Panic Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
BioShock 2 Single-Player Theme (free)
Army of Two: The 40th Day PS3 Theme (free)
Dante’s Inferno Theme (free)
Dita Von Teese Premium Theme ($1.99)


PlayStation 3 | Guitar Hero head leaving Activision

February 3rd, 2010 No comments

Ex-Yahoo exec Dan Rosensweig departs “to pursue other career opportunities” after less than a year on the job.

Last March, Activision made a splash by hiring former Yahoo COO Dan Rosensweig to serve as president and CEO of Guitar Hero developer RedOctane. Today the publisher announced that Rosensweig’s term of service with the company has ended, with the executive moving on “to pursue other career opportunities.”

Rosensweig took the helm of the Guitar Hero business as the music genre was beginning a precipitous decline. Despite a flood of releases, including Guitar Hero 5, Guitar Hero: Metallica, Guitar Hero: Van Halen, DJ Hero, Guitar Hero: Smash Hits, Guitar Hero On Tour: Modern Hits, Band Hero, Rock Band: The Beatles, and Lego Rock Band, rhythm game sales were barely half what they were the year before. According to Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter, US retail revenues from rhythm games totaled $876 million in 2009, down more than 47 percent from $1.66 billion the year before.

The executive’s stint with Activision may be best remembered for a September interview in which he claimed Guitar Hero 5 was outselling rival The Beatles: Rock Band 4-to-1 in the US. The following month when the industry-tracking NPD Group released its figures, The Beatles: Rock Band was the best-selling rhythm game with 595,000 copies sold, compared to Guitar Hero 5’s sales of 499,000.

Rosensweig’s role at Activision will be filled by David Haddad, currently the COO of the Guitar Hero business unit. Before joining Activision, Haddad served as COO of Vivendi Games’ Sierra Online division.

As for what other opportunities Rosensweig is pursuing, the executive is the new president and CEO of Chegg.com, an online textbook rental company. Looking to capitalize on frugal students who don’t want to shell out for expensive course materials, the service lets users rent books by the semester or the quarter.

Read and Post Comments | Get the full article at GameSpot


PlayStation 3 | Guitar Hero head leaving Activision” was posted by Brendan Sinclair on Tue, 02 Feb 2010 13:47:22 -0800

PlayStation 3 | DJ Hero ‘highest-grossing new IP’ of 2009, claims Activision

January 19th, 2010 No comments

Publisher counts Guitar Hero franchise extension as original intellectual property, says $120 rhythm game grossed more in US and Europe than any other new brand.

Last year saw a number of attention-grabbing original intellectual properties, including Dragon Age: Origins, Brutal Legend, Infamous, Prototype, EA Sports Active, and GameSpot’s 2009 Game of the Year, Demon’s Souls. However, Activision claims that its recently released DJ Hero topped them all.

The publisher today declared DJ Hero the “highest grossing new IP in the US and Europe for calendar 2009,” citing the industry-tracking NPD Group as the source of its information. One factor in the game’s favor was a $120 price tag, meaning DJ Hero could match a standard $60 title’s gross take by selling half as many copies.

Activision did not provide a dollar amount for the game or sales figures for the game. However, as previously reported, DJ Hero sold 298,000 copies on all platforms combined in its first two months on the US market, according to the NPD Group.

Perhaps paradoxically, Activision touts the game as an original intellectual property but also considers it part of the Guitar Hero franchise. In announcing DJ Hero’s “highest grossing” designation, Activision Blizzard CEO Robert Kotick said the game “further establishes Guitar Hero as the premier franchise of its kind.”

Regardless of sales figures relative to other games, DJ Hero has performed well enough for Activision to commit to another installment. In the most recent issue of Game Informer, Kotick confirmed that a second version of the game is in the works, saying, “I can’t wait for you to see next year’s.”

A representative with the NPD Group had not responded to a request for confirmation of Activision’s figures as of press time. For more on the game, check out GameSpot’s review of DJ Hero.

Read and Post Comments | Get the full article at GameSpot


PlayStation 3 | DJ Hero ‘highest-grossing new IP’ of 2009, claims Activision” was posted by Brendan Sinclair on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 11:15:36 -0800

Xbox 360 | Lips sings Party Classics March 2

January 14th, 2010 No comments

Microsoft’s Xbox 360-exclusive karaoke rhythm game brings 40 new on-dics tracks from Spice Girls, KISS, Village People, more; January DLC detailed.

Microsoft’s big push into the casual market will come later this year with the launch of its camera-based motion-sensing add-on currently known as Project Natal. However, that isn’t the only motion-sensing product the publisher has aimed at the casual market. Today, Microsoft announced that its motion-sensing mic-equipped karaoke franchise Lips will expand in North America on March 2 with the launch of Party Classics. The game will land in Europe beginning February 26.

As with previous installments in the franchise, Party Classics integrates with a wireless, motion-sensing microphone that syncs up with the various songs in the game to create unique light displays. Notably, Party Classics introduces the ability to use third-party USB microphones, such as those that come with Activision’s and Electronic Arts’ respective Guitar Hero and Rock Band franchises.

Party Classics features 40 on-disc songs. Artists slated to appear in the game include the Spice Girls, KISS, Village People, Tiffany, Gloria Gaynor, The B-52s, and Chumbawumba. The game also supports Avatars and Avatar rewards, as well as the customary set of achievements and other features.

Microsoft also today announced the lineup of Lips’ weekly downloadable content for January. Included in the lineup are tunes from Death Cab for Cutie, The Miracles, Fleetwood Mac, The Cardigans, and more. Tracks run for MSP 160 ($2) a piece, with The Miracles and The Cardigans song packs available for MSP 440 ($5.50) a piece. January’s full lineup of DLC can be found below.

January 1:
Club Nouveau – “Lean on Me”
David Guetta feat. Cozi – “Baby When the Light”
Kanye West feat. Chris Martin – “Homecoming”

January 8:
The Miracles – “Love Machine (Part 1)”
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles – “I Second That Emotion”
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles – “The Tracks of My Tears”
The Miracles Song Pack – Includes “I Second That Emotion,” “Love Machine (Part 1),” “The Tracks of My Tears”

January 15:
Anita Ward – “Ring My Bell”
Death Cab for Cutie – “Soul Meets Body”
Wilson Pickett – “Mustang Sally”

January 22:
Fleetwood Mac – “Little Lies”
Robbie Williams – “Tripping”
Vanessa Carlton – “Ordinary Day”

January 29:
The Cardigans – “Carnival”
The Cardigans – “My Favorite Game”
The Cardigans Song Pack – Includes “Carnival,” “Erase/Rewind,” “My Favorite Game”
Crystal Waters – “Gypsy Woman (She’s Homeless)”

Read and Post Comments | Get the full article at GameSpot


Xbox 360 | Lips sings Party Classics March 2” was posted by Tom Magrino on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 16:44:20 -0800

Mad Catz pulled out of Guitar Hero before it hit big

January 8th, 2010 No comments

Think of the original Guitar Hero, and two names pop immediately to mind: Harmonix and Red Octane. A third name that you might not be aware of: Mad Catz. Speaking to Kotaku, Mad Catz CEO Darren Richardson has revealed that peripheral maker was originally part of the Guitar Hero project. Mad Catz was responsible for the Xbox version, but eventually decided to pull out of the project thanks to a lawsuit filed by Konami — which resulted in Guitar Hero being exclusive to PS2.

Furthermore, Mad Catz actually paid $300,000 to remove itself from the project, only to see it grow into the gigantic success it is today. Says Richardson, “Everyone else made hundreds of millions and we paid money to not be a part of it.” Ouch.

JoystiqMad Catz pulled out of Guitar Hero before it hit big originally appeared on Joystiq on Fri, 08 Jan 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Performous Is Like Rock Band for Your Linux PC

December 5th, 2009 No comments

Linux only (for now): If you love karaoke or really get into music-based games like Rock Band and Guitar Hero, then you’ll love Performous. It’s an open-source band game that’s perfect for your next party or get-together.

Performous is a free computer-based game for one or more players. Players compete against each other to see who can score the most points with the game system as your judge. It’s got a practice mode so you can secretly get a head start on your friends before you get together to play, and auto-detects and works with Rock Band or Guitar Hero instruments you hook up.

Performous is more than just a game, though. It’s also a teaching tool you can use anytime to help improve your singing voice. It accurately detects your pitch even in noisy surroundings so you know when you’re hitting the right notes and displays musical notes onscreen to help keep you on track.

You can pick up several free songs from the web site, or you can add your own MP3s, along with song text and video files. So go snag the game, add some music, and get your groove on this weekend (without ponying up for a gaming console or a new game). Performous is a free, open-source download, currently Linux only. The download page points out that Windows and Mac versions are in the works, so keep your fingers crossed.

PlayStation 3 | Activision Blizzard posts $15 million profit, revenue up $23 million

November 6th, 2009 No comments

World’s top publisher turns small profit on $703 million in sales; $4.05 billion 2009 outlook maintained despite concerns about holiday consumer spending.

Over the past two weeks, Sony, Microsoft, Nintendo, Konami, Capcom, THQ, Ubisoft, Namco, and Square Enix all released their most recent earnings reports.

Today, it was Activision Blizzard’s turn.

The world’s biggest-third party publisher reported $703 million in net revenue for the July-September quarter, up from $680 million during the same period the year prior. More importantly, the company posted a quarterly profit of $15 million, way up from the $108 million the company lost in Q3 2008.

The quarter also saw Activision Blizzard’s overall game software market share grow to 13.3 percent in the US. In Europe and the US combined, the company controls 12.3 percent of the software market, according to the NPD Group and Charttrack/Gfk.

In a statement accompanying the announcement, Activision Blizzard’s famously outspoken CEO Bobby Kotick credited Guitar Hero 5 and Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 as the quarter’s biggest two debut games. Also helping fill company coffers were catalog sales of Guitar Hero and Call of Duty games and ongoing income from the massively multiplayer role-playing game World of Warcraft.

Kotick also tried to soothe the fears of analysts about slowing sales of rhythm games–such as Activision’s own forthcoming DJ Hero, which is reportedly seeing lower-than-expected preorders. He pointed out that when all SKUs were combined, Guitar Hero World Tour was the top-selling game in the US and Europe for the first nine months of 2009.

“Year to date through September 30, the Guitar Hero franchise was the number-one best-selling third-party franchise in North America and Europe,” Kotick said in a statement. “For the month of September, sales of music games in the U.S. increased 72 percent in dollars year over year, which demonstrates the sustained interest in this new and important game category.” September saw the release of both Guitar Hero 5 and rival MTV Games’ The Beatles: Rock Band, with the latter outselling the former but still managing to be unprofitable.

In the official Activision earnings release, Kotick was bullish on his company’s slate for the current quarter, which includes Band Hero, DJ Hero, Tony Hawk: Ride, and next week’s Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2. (The latter title is the now most preordered game in Activision and GameStop history.) However, speaking to Reuters, the executive was more candid, saying he was “very concerned” about recession-hit consumers’ spending this holiday season.

“The question is whether the consumer will materialize, and I think there’s huge risk that the consumer won’t materialize,” he told Reuters.

Kotick’s fears aside, Activision is sticking by its full calendar year earnings guidance of $4.05 billion in net revenues and $0.26 earnings per diluted share of $0.26. It did warn, however, that the figure was subject to certain risks, such as World of Warcraft’s ongoing struggle to switch localization partners in China. Earlier this week, operation of the MMORPG was suspended in the Asian nation following a dispute between two regulatory agencies of the Beijing government.

Finally, during a conference call with analysts after the report’s release, Activision executives confirmed it was planning to release new installments in the Call of Duty, Guitar Hero, Tony Hawk, and Spider-Man franchises in 2010.

Read and Post Comments | Get the full article at GameSpot


PlayStation 3 | Activision Blizzard posts $15 million profit, revenue up $23 million” was posted by Tor Thorsen on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 14:08:01 -0800

Wii | No Doubt belts out Band Hero lawsuit

November 5th, 2009 No comments

Gwen Stefani and co. claim Activision had no contractual right to allow group’s in-game avatars to be used to perform other artists’ songs.

Activision’s decision to include the late Kurt Cobain as a playable character in Guitar Hero 5 was considered by some to be tasteless. However, the situation turned into a public relations gaffe after the late singer’s wife, Courtney Love, claimed that she hadn’t been informed that Cobain’s avatar would be able to perform any song in the game.

Now, one more act has stepped up to protest the use of its in-game likeness in ways apparently not made clear by Activision. The Los Angeles Times reports today that No Doubt has filed a suit against Activision over its appearance in Band Hero, which debuted this week on the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, Wii, and DS. The suit reportedly claims that the publisher did not have the contractual right to allow No Doubt band members to be used in songs other than the ones they had provided for the game, those being “Just a Girl,” “Don’t Speak,” and “Excuse Me Mr.”

“The band [members] are bitterly disappointed that their name and likeness was taken and used without their permission,” No Doubt manager Jim Guerinot told the LA Times. “They agreed to play three No Doubt songs as a band…Activision then went and put them in 62 other songs and broke the band up [and] never even asked.”

No Doubt reportedly took exception in its suit with having individual band members perform other artists’ songs, particularly those that include suggestive lyrics such as The Rolling Stones’ “Honky Tonk Woman.”

“While No Doubt are avid fans of the Rolling Stones and even have performed in concerts with the Rolling Stones, the Character Manipulation Feature results in an unauthorized performance by the Gwen Stefani avatar in a male voice boasting about having sex with prostitutes,” the suit states.

The complaint reportedly goes on to note that Activision intentionally did not tell the members of No Doubt that their avatars could be used to perform other songs. The statement echoes an allegation leveled by ’80s rock icon Jon Bon Jovi following the Cobain flap. Speaking about meeting with Activision about having his likeness appear in the game, Bon Jovi said that “no one even broached the subject with me that I would be singing other people’s stuff.”

No Doubt’s complaint goes on to note that Activision refused to remove band members’ likenesses from the game or lock them to the group’s songs, with the publisher allegedly saying that such a move would be “too expensive.”

“Activision has a written agreement to use No Doubt in Band Hero–an agreement signed by No Doubt after extensive negotiations with its representatives, who collectively have decades of experience in the entertainment industry,” the publisher said in response to the suit. “Pursuant to that agreement, Activision worked with No Doubt and the band’s management in developing Band Hero…Activision is exploring its own legal options with respect to No Doubt’s obligations under the agreement.”

Read and Post Comments | Get the full article at GameSpot


Wii | No Doubt belts out Band Hero lawsuit” was posted by Tom Magrino on Wed, 04 Nov 2009 18:00:18 -0800