Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Rock Band Unplugged for PSP Content: I played Rock Band Unplugged for PSP. Well, it did not require a small plastic guitar. Set for release in June,

Rock Band Unplugged for PSP
Content: I played Rock Band Unplugged for PSP. Well, it did not require a small plastic guitar.

Set for release in June, Unplugged will come with all the attributes of the four players playing music, although the gameplay is obviously very different when it is modified for the handheld console Sony. In the PSP version, the four musical parts are displayed on the screen: You go back and between them, playing all at once.

How is this possible? Each song is divided into short sentences of a few notes each. Perfectly nail a sentence, and that part of the song will start playing itself for a while so you can go to the next section. The game shows you what part of the jump in order to keep your score is a perfect combo.

There is a bit of a learning curve, but once you have the control down, Unplugged offers a musical experience that feels quite different from the development of the gaming house, while maintaining its own appeal.

Longtime fans of Rock Band maker Harmonix Music Systems has already realized that Unplugged is actually a return to the frequency and amplitude, the PlayStation 2 developer created when Guitar Hero was just a twinkle in Alex Rigopulos Harmonix CEO eyes. It feels a bit like the amplitude, and I know because I just went back and had the old game for a spin to refresh my memory.

That's all there: Jumping between the "tracks", which define each part of a song, have to nail every part of the sentence before playing himself, scoring combo is moves by jumping to the right lane immediately after completing a sentence. Only now you play rock songs like "Buddy Holly" and "More Than a Feeling" and some tracks will be available exclusively on the PSP this game first, before displaying on the console of Rock Band download store.

Exclusive songs include:

* 3 Doors Down - Kryptonite "
* AFI - "Miss Murder"
* Alice in Chains - "Would?"
* Audioslave - "Essence"
* Black Tide - Show Me the Way "
* Blink-182 - "What's My Age Again"
* Freezepop - Less Talk More Rokk "
* Jackson 5 - "ABC"
* Tenacious D - "Rock Your Socks"

Rock Band Unplugged for PSP lets you play the drum, vocal, guitar and bass tracks for 40 songs using the buttons on the handheld console.

As I said, there is certainly a learning curve. To flip between all four channels, you use the buttons L and R. To reach the red, yellow, green and blue notes, you use the left arrow, up arrow, triangle and circle buttons on the PSP. While six buttons, you must alternate between rapid succession in the fire. It is more difficult than it may seem.

In fact, I was not the biggest fan of the amplitude, as I thought it was a bit too chaotic and did not really replicate the experience of playing a song. In some respects, Unplugged fixes. You have a good amount of time to move from one lane to another when you are stringing together a combo, so that the feeling of being lost and not knowing what to play is reduced a little.

But the gameplay is still disjointed you flip on the part of the game. When you play the bass, the track sounds low stronger than everything else - he did not really feel that you are listening to the song the way it is intended. Sometimes, during the essential parts of a song, Unplugged decline in four lanes, a sentence based on the structure and you play a long solo. For me, it re-focused my attention on the song rather than the parts.

I enjoyed my time with Unplugged, even if I play was limited to only a few songs. I'm curious to see how the game is on the long term, and how difficult it is when the notes start coming fast and furious. It will be available on PSP in June 9th

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