I didn’t feel like part of the band I felt like a total stranger. So little context is given between sets – just some brief radio DJ banter and a few fake fan tweets – that when you’re just shunted from band to band every three songs there’s never any sense of camaraderie on stage. No, the problem is that I simply didn’t care about them. The problem with GH Live is not the overly cheesy vamping of the live-action bandmates around you, nor is it the way they dynamically chastise you when you flub a solo. This is the mode that drops you into the shoes of the guitarist in about a dozen different fictional bands across two music festivals, experiencing each three-song mini-set as a first-person shredder. Stage DiveMy enthusiasm for this exciting new era of Guitar Heroism took a temporary dip, however, once I hopped into the career mode, GH Live. Not only does this reconfigured button grouping keep your fretting hand rooted to the one spot, meaning your eyes never need to leave the screen, it just feels like a better approximation of actually playing the guitar - especially on the upper difficulty levels where the chord shapes and ascending and descending hammer-ons and pull-offs feel particularly analogous to the real thing. It takes time to adapt from coloured buttons to monochrome, but it's ultimately a change for the better.Yet at some point during my first late night it suddenly clicked, and now I feel like it would be a real step backwards to ever return to the old five-button design. At speed, it was tough for me to distinguish one black button from another, and hopping back and forth between the two rows almost always ended in me fumbling the transition and killing my multiplier. As someone who’s been playing GH games since banging out those first few power chords of I Love Rock and Roll in the original, I initially struggled to get to grips with the new button layout. Developer FreeStyle Games has refreshed the Guitar Hero experience considerably by adding a sixth button and splitting the frets into two rows: three black buttons, and three white. Looking great so far, Guitar Hero Live is set to arrive for the PS4, PS3, Xbox One, Xbox 360, Wii U, Apple TV, iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch (whoa is that a to of platforms) on October 25th.It all starts with that new controller. So aside from the fact that you’ll get to rock along with some of your favorite band’s music videos, you’ll also get some stuff to play with in the game and show off. Once you gain entry to a Premium Show, and beat the songs included therein, you’ll be on the receiving end of some cool and exclusive items like “guitar upgrades, player cards, note highways and more”. As you may or may not know, the Premium Shows are just that, and are playable in GHTV if you’ve accumulated enough in-game challenge victories. “Shepherd of Fire”, “Buried Alive”, and “Nightmare” are all set to be included in the new rhythm game’s Premium Shows feature, which will give the band’s fans playing GHTV something to shoot for. Activision has announced that a trio of Avenged Sevenfold’s tunes will be coming to the upcoming Guitar Hero Live.
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