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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, January 4, 2008

'Guitar Hero III' definitely rocks

By John Breeden II
Washington Post

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

"Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock" retains a lot of the appeal of the original "Guitar Hero" while adding addictive new features.

Associated Press/Activison

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"GUITAR HERO III: LEGENDS OF ROCK"

Teen; Nintendo Wii, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation 2, PC (XP, Vista), Mac and Activision

The makers of Guitar Hero, the popular musical game series, would have been crazy to change too much with "Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock." Original "Guitar Hero" developer Harmonix was bought by MTV and makes a competitor, "Rock Band." Thankfully, new developer Neversoft retained the core game play of "Guitar Hero" and added new features to make the experience even more addictive. If you like the series, you will love "Guitar Hero III."

As with the other franchise titles, you listen to a song and hit one of five fret buttons while strumming the guitar bar to simulate a note. Play the song right and the crowd will love you. Miss too many notes and fans will boo you off the stage.

Song choice can make or break a game like this, and "Guitar Hero III" has that angle covered. The more than 70 tracks include "Hit Me With Your Best Shot," "Slow Ride," "Rock & Roll All Night," "Barracuda," "Cult of Personality," "Paint It Black," "Mississippi Queen" and "Black Magic Woman." Many songs are performed by cover bands, but the game features a few originals.

The biggest change in game play is the addition of famous "bosses" who need to be battled and beaten to move on to a new stage. You'll be ready to hit the next gig, and Tom Morello from Rage Against the Machine or Slash from Guns N' Roses will call you out. You must play one of their famous songs against them. You can attack by correctly playing certain notes to break their guitar strings, flip their notes or overload their amps. But they can do the same to you, and they take no prisoners. In the final battle, you square off against the Devil (named Lou) in the Charlie Daniels Band's fiddle classic "The Devil Went Down to Georgia." You probably can guess what happens if you lose.

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