Woody
06-28-2007, 05:26 PM
Today Activision announced that Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s has gone gold. And despite release date estimates of July 17th, the publisher indicates that the game will not hit shelves until July 24th. This is the last iteration of the Guitar Hero franchise that will be developed by Harmonix as Activision has opted to move development to the Activision owned crew responsible for the GUN and Tony Hawk games, Neversoft.
Gamespot
Rock the 80's is essentially an expansion. It doesn't sell alongside a guitar. And there's nothing wrong with this, I have 5 guitars already. I can't say I'm exactly happy with the pricetag compared to the setlist depth though. Let's examine:
Guitar Hero - $39.99
30 song set list + 17 bonus tracks + 2 "hidden" tracks = 49 total songs
Guitar Hero II - $49.99
(PS2) 40 song set list + 26 bonus tracks = 66 total songs
(360) 48 song set list + 26 bonus tracks = 72 total songs (not including the 9 XBLA downloadable tracks)
Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s - $49.99
30 song set list = 30 total songs.
The problem I have here is that I'll be paying the same amount for 30 songs as I previously paid for 66. And where some will argue that this is because some of the tracks on Rock the 80's are original recordings, the woody-truth (meaning, as I see it) is that the price increase is little more than Activision upping the sticker price to capitalize on their investment at our expense. Why would I think that? There are only six "original recording" tracks in the game and they're not exactly the upper eschelon of the tracklist.
In all honesty, if this wasn't the final Harmonix developed Guitar Hero title, I wouldn't buy it in protest. And at this point, unless there's a miraculous 9th inning homerun from Neversoft, I have no interest in artificially padding Activisions wallet by buying Guitar Hero III either.
I'll follow Harmonix on to Rock Band and Activision can eat me.
Gamespot
Rock the 80's is essentially an expansion. It doesn't sell alongside a guitar. And there's nothing wrong with this, I have 5 guitars already. I can't say I'm exactly happy with the pricetag compared to the setlist depth though. Let's examine:
Guitar Hero - $39.99
30 song set list + 17 bonus tracks + 2 "hidden" tracks = 49 total songs
Guitar Hero II - $49.99
(PS2) 40 song set list + 26 bonus tracks = 66 total songs
(360) 48 song set list + 26 bonus tracks = 72 total songs (not including the 9 XBLA downloadable tracks)
Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s - $49.99
30 song set list = 30 total songs.
The problem I have here is that I'll be paying the same amount for 30 songs as I previously paid for 66. And where some will argue that this is because some of the tracks on Rock the 80's are original recordings, the woody-truth (meaning, as I see it) is that the price increase is little more than Activision upping the sticker price to capitalize on their investment at our expense. Why would I think that? There are only six "original recording" tracks in the game and they're not exactly the upper eschelon of the tracklist.
In all honesty, if this wasn't the final Harmonix developed Guitar Hero title, I wouldn't buy it in protest. And at this point, unless there's a miraculous 9th inning homerun from Neversoft, I have no interest in artificially padding Activisions wallet by buying Guitar Hero III either.
I'll follow Harmonix on to Rock Band and Activision can eat me.