Games
Sony
Microsoft
Nintendo
Other Platforms
Upcoming &
Recent Releases
xx
0-D Beat Drop!
xx
Are You Smarter Than A 5th Grader? Game Time
70
Ashes Cricket 2009
91
Assassin's Creed II
69
Axel & Pixel
xx
Backyard Football '10
60
Bakugan Battle Brawlers
78
Band Hero
63
Bass Pro Shops: The Strike
92
Batman: Arkham Asylum
89
Beatles: Rock Band, The
71
Ben 10: Alien Force - Vilgax Attacks
xx
Black College Football: The Xperience - The Doug Williams Edition
xx
Blood Bowl
83
Borderlands
44
Brave: A Warrior's Tale
82
Brutal Legend
70
Bubble Bobble Neo!
77
Bust-A-Move Live!
xx
Cabela's Big Game Hunter 2010
xx
Cabela's Outdoor Adventures 2009
94
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2
58
Cars Race-O-Rama
xx
Chaotic: Shadow Warriors
68
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
74
Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3 - Commander's Challenge
xx
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation - Deadly Intent
45
Darkest of Days
83
Defense Grid: The Awakening
xx
Diner Dash
87
DiRT 2
84
DJ Hero
87
Dragon Age: Origins
67
Dragon Ball: Raging Blast
xx
Dreamkiller
xx
Encleverment Experiment
57
F.E.A.R. 2: Reborn
51
Fairytale Fights
65
Fallout 3: Mothership Zeta
90
FIFA Soccer 10
61
Football Genius: The Ultimate Quiz
92
Forza Motorsport 3
42
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra
xx
Gears of War 2: All Fronts Collection
79
Gears of War 2: Dark Corners
89
Grand Theft Auto IV: The Ballad of Gay Tony
85
Guitar Hero 5
xx
Guitar Hero: Van Halen
xx
Gyromancer
83
Halo 3: ODST
62
Heroes Over Europe
80
IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey
62
Inferno Pool
61
Invincible Tiger: The Legend of Han Tao
74
Ion Assault
xx
James Cameron's Avatar: The Game
xx
Jurassic: The Hunted
xx
Karaoke Revolution
90
Left 4 Dead 2
76
Left 4 Dead: Crash Course
69
LEGO Indiana Jones 2: The Adventure Continues
74
LEGO Rock Band
69
Lips: Number One Hits
63
Lucidity
xx
Madagascar Kartz
85
Madden NFL 10
69
Magnacarta 2
82
Marvel vs. Capcom 2
73
Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2
48
Mass Effect: Pinnacle Station
64
Military Madness: Nectaris
73
Mini Ninjas
xx
MX vs. ATV Reflex
83
NBA 2K10
71
NBA 2K10: Draft Combine
80
NBA Live 10
31
NBA Unrivaled
75
NCAA Basketball 10
83
Need for Speed SHIFT
88
NHL 10
68
NHL 2K10
76
Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising
77
Panzer General: Allied Assault
83
Pinball Hall of Fame: The Williams Collection
xx
Planet 51
77
Pro Evolution Soccer 2010
xx
Qubed
63
Raiden IV
63
Rainbow Islands: Towering Adventure!
38
Raven Squad: Operation Hidden Dagger
66
Red Faction: Guerrilla - Demons of the Badlands
58
Risen
xx
Rock Band Metal Track Pack
xx
Rogue Warrior
xx
Saboteur, The
75
Sam & Max Beyond Time and Space
60
Saw
69
Section 8
88
Shadow Complex
71
Sonic & Knuckles
71
South Park Let's Go Tower Defense Play!
xx
SpongeBob's Truth or Square
43
Star Wars The Clone Wars: Republic Heroes
xx
Stoked: Big Air Edition
38
Summer Athletics 2009
60
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled
80
Tekken 6
60
Tony Hawk: RIDE
69
Tornado Outbreak
62
Tower Bloxx Deluxe
86
Trials HD
72
Wallace & Gromit's Grand Adventures Ep 2: The Last Resort
70
Wallace & Gromit's Grand Adventures Ep 3: Muzzled!
xx
Wallace & Gromit's Grand Adventures Ep 4: The Bogey Man
39
Warriors: Street Brawl, The
44
Watchmen: The End is Nigh - Part 2
66
Way of the Samurai 3
69
WET
54
Where the Wild Things Are
72
Wolfenstein
81
WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2010
55
Yo-Ho Kablammo
66
Zombie Apocalypse
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed games.
Guitar Hero 5

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 69 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 74 votes
Read user comments
Rate this game >
Game Info
Publisher: Activision
Developer: Neversoft Entertainment
Genre(s): Music
Players: 8
ESRB Rating: T (Teen)
Release Date: September 1, 2009
Summary
For the first time ever, players can customize the make-up of their band by rocking with any combination of instruments in-game: whether it be two guitars and two drums, or three guitars and a microphone, any combination is possible, allowing players to experience music their own way. Brand new, innovative, easy-to-use gameplay modes like Party Play and RockFest put fun, competition and control at center stage as fans tailor the Guitar Hero experience to match their personal style and interests. For extended hours of entertainment, downloadable content from Guitar Hero World Tour is compatible with the game and can automatically be updated to include all of the upgrades and enhancements of Guitar Hero 5. Guitar Hero 5 features the strongest, most varied set list to-date comprised of master tracks from 85 of the hottest bands of today and the biggest classic acts including; Kings of Leon, The Rolling Stones, The White Stripes, Santana, Vampire Weekend, Tom Petty, Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, plus more than 25 artists from a variety of music genres that are making their music video game debut. Among the first-time-ever features of Guitar Hero 5 are: Party Play, where players can jump in or drop out of gameplay seamlessly; RockFest, a comprehensive competitive experience available featuring five new head-to-head modes playable online or in your living room; and the ability to play the entire set-list from the first time the game is turned on. Guitar Hero 5 refines the player experience, enhances the art style and redesigns core features such as GHMusic StudioSM, making it the most accessible, fun-to-play and authentic experience for seasoned music gamers as well as first-time players. New innovations such as Band Moments, where bands are rewarded for hitting special note streams together and song challenges where gamers are tasked to play through a song a specific way, add a new competitive layer of excitement and accomplishment to the music rhythm genre. [Activision]
Also On Metacritic
GAMES: Guitar Hero World Tour
Cheat Codes & Hints: Cheat Code Central
Also On The Web: Official Website
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
1UP
This is the game that can actually bring both hardcore and casual rockers together for a good time. The multiplayer is easier to jump into than Rock Band, but the game's more intense difficulty settings still provide a challenge for the plastic-instrument elitist.
Read Full Review >PGNx Media
Guitar Hero 5 is the ultimate party game. The solid, addicting Guitar Hero gameplay has been made even more accessible and compelling with all of the new additions Neversoft has added for this version.
Read Full Review >Official Xbox Magazine
If you’re into party gaming with tons of tunes and opulent options, this is the Guitar Hero to own — easily the best since Guitar Hero II, and the most flexible and friendly interactive jukebox the genre has ever seen. All the elements really came together in GH5; this is musical fun done right.
Read Full Review >Extreme Gamer
Guitar Hero 5 is the most refined version of an instrument based music game you can find. From the hardcore Guitar Hero fanatics to the casual gamer, Guitar Hero 5 has more features built into its gameplay to suit everyone.
Read Full Review >Digital Chumps
They've taken a format, stripped away any annoying features that take away from the gameplay's flow, and created enough subtle innovations to truly create a definitive experience.
Read Full Review >Game Chronicles
Guitar Hero 5 isn’t the best game the industry can offer but it has made huge leaps, and for once, this time, they are all in the right direction.
Read Full Review >Planet Xbox 360
This is easily the most-versatile music game to date, doing so much right for so many different gamers. Even though the basic gameplay is the same thing GH fans have come to love over the past 5 years, there are enough new features and little tweaks that we can finally say this is the true franchise sequel we have been waiting for.
Read Full Review >Cheat Code Central
Despite the aging conventions of the genre, Guitar Hero 5 gets nearly everything right. There is a ton of gameplay packed into a decidedly user-friendly/hardcore-friendly package.
Read Full Review >GamingTrend
While some of the features come off half baked as they aren't applied globally, most of the improvements add up to something greater than their individual parts. The animation, lip synch, graphic improvements, vocal modes, new multiplayer modes, and the addition of Party Play add up to a product that is more than the shiny track pack that some folks might expect.
Read Full Review >GameDaily
The presentation hasn't changed much and the gameplay still revolves around the same note hitting formula, but if you love music (and who doesn't), you can't afford to miss this latest jam.
Read Full Review >GamePro
An incredibly solid title with plenty to see, do and most importantly, rock out to. Brandishing some stellar new Competitive play concepts (Do or Die, Momentum) not to mention some incredibly creative new stages to play on, Guitar Hero 5 stays true to its franchise roots and rocks just about as hard as anyone could expect it to. With its astounding variety and tried-and-true formula, it's truly hard to find fault with Guitar Hero 5 without resorting to nitpicking.
Read Full Review >GameSpy
With Guitar Hero 5 Neversoft has finally found its "confidence." An assured nature to the game's new visual direction contrasts with the see-what-sticks "extreme" visual stylings of its predecessors, and with several new game modes Guitar Hero finally bests its direct competitor in ease of use and friendliness, in many respects.
Read Full Review >ZTGameDomain
Definitely the best of the series, and easily the most streamlined of the genre. The option for importing songs is disappointing, but everything else is finally up to par with that other music game.
Read Full Review >Hardcore Gamer Magazine
If you’re intoGuitar Hero, buy this game. It’s one of the most solid Guitar Hero titles yet and should keep you busy for a long time.
Read Full Review >Da Gameboyz
Guitar Hero 5 stands as the best instalment on the franchise to date. The new additions enhance the experience and the incredible set list makes this game a must own for fans of the franchise or even for those looking to jump into the crazy world that is Guitar Hero.
Read Full Review >Kombo
Someone must have switched to regular coffee because Guitar Hero 5 is fresh and reinvigorates the series with outstanding presentation value and entertaining modes.
Read Full Review >Eurogamer
There's just nothing wrong with Guitar Hero 5: no horrible new art direction or gimmicky new features (3's guitar battles still haven't quite been forgiven), no backwards moves, no ill-advised changes to a winning formula.
Read Full Review >Totally360
Overall, Guitar Hero 5 is an absolutely fantastic title and is the best Guitar Hero game in quite some time.
Read Full Review >Vandal Online
Although it may seem that Guitar Hero 5 is just an update of the last year edition, the truth is that the new features, the improvements in the interface and the track list make it the best installment of the series in the last years.
Read Full Review >XGN
With Guitar Hero 5 Neversoft almost succeeded in creating the perfect music game. Only some small mistakes prevent this game from scoring the complete 100 points. Still this game is the best music game at this moment.
Read Full Review >VideoGamer
The core gameplay mechanics are as good as ever, the presentation has been toned down for the better, there are some brilliant new multiplayer options, and everything feels more streamlined than before. Well worth adding to your playlist.
Read Full Review >MEGamers
The series was really heading off track despite the good sales, but we can safely declare this the best Guitar Hero in sometime.
Read Full Review >Play Magazine
Despite being a bit burned out on the whole music-game craze, Guitar Hero 5's new features and ear-pleasing track list had me strumming and drumming on the plastic instrument peripherals all over again...and having a great time doing it.
Read Full Review >Cynamite
It doesn't reinvent the genre. But it's more fun than ever to play the game in band mode.
Read Full Review >DarkZero
Despite these few annoyances, Guitar Hero 5 is still an excellent example of a band-based rhythm action game done right. This is a true evolution of the Guitar Hero phenomenon, simple but devastatingly effective changes that really bring the best out of the genre.
Read Full Review >InsideGamer.nl
Neversoft has delivered a very impressive game with Guitar Hero 5. They have finally cleared al the errors from the previous games and put something extra in the game instead. With a very nice tracklist and the new improvements, Guitar Hero 5 is one of the best music games ever made. The only bad thing about Guitar Hero 5 is that you can not completely import the tracks from Guitar Hero: World Tour and Guitar Hero: Smash Hits.
Read Full Review >HellBored
A diverse tracklist means there really is something for everyone, and sticking it on Party Mode to play random songs is great with friends. New competitive modes are also well executed, meaning there’s enjoyment to be dragged from it everywhere.
Read Full Review >AtomicGamer
But Guitar Hero 5 is the best game in the franchise yet, and the only thing that'll keep me from playing it six months from now is that I've got so many tracks already bought in Rock Band 2. GH5 is not too little, but it may wind up being too late.
Read Full Review >IGN
The accessibility, streamlined presentation, solid note charts, and welcome gameplay improvements make this the best Guitar Hero game in recent memory.
Read Full Review >GameTrailers
Though it can sometimes feel that the series is in a perpetual state of catch-up with Rock Band, Guitar Hero 5 strikes back with a considerable set of new features and improvements that truly count. The band experience is cohesive and party play is at its most effortless yet.
Read Full Review >Strategy Informer
What is Guitar Hero trying to do? It's not pushing in any straight direction, but in every which way, making owners everywhere enjoy the lowest common denominator. As a rhythm game, there's no comparison, but as a music game, one in which players can enjoy the songs they are playing...that's something that needs to be seriously addressed.
Read Full Review >Games Master UK
Unless keyboards are on the horizon we can't see GH getting any better than this update. [Nov 2009, p.85]
Xbox World Australia
In the end of the day, it's still Guitar Hero, the uglier, sometimes less pleasing brother of Rock Band.
Read Full Review >GameFocus
Let’s put it this way: if you bought World Tour and ended up disappointed, the chances that the same thing will happen to you again are incredibly thin. I’m not afraid to say that Guitar Hero 5 is exactly what World Tour should have been in the first place.
Read Full Review >Xbox World 360 Magazine UK
Still, this is a definite step forward for a genre in which the idea pool must be running dry. The Beatles: Rock Band has the style and the songs, but GH5 boasts the greatest features for get-togethers.
Read Full Review >MondoXbox
Guitar Hero 5 confirms the overall good quality of the series: Neversoft successfully managed to improve and extend the game's interface, modes and "social" features, fully justifying the trailing number 5 in the title. An advised buy especially if you're used to play with friends, at home or online.
Read Full Review >ActionTrip
The ability for players to jump in and out of the game in Party Play removes a lot of hassle of previous games when you are just looking to kill some time with friends.
Read Full Review >TeamXbox
There’s no question that Activision and Neversoft aren’t content to sit back and just release new songs—or release new major titles in the GH franchise that have trivial or negligible feature offerings.
Read Full Review >GameSpot
Wide-ranging improvements and an excellent new Party Play mode make Guitar Hero 5 a great way to bring some rock into your living room.
Read Full Review >Game Informer
Guitar Hero 5 is a well-done sequel with high quality production values and a good feature set. If something seems, well, missing, I guess that’s just the natural passage of time. The music genre has been extremely successful, but I’m not sure the crazy days of 2007 are ever coming back.
Read Full Review >Meristation
Guitar Hero makes a good comeback with the polished and refined version of its predecessor with attractive visuals, a now more accessible but still difficult to learn GHStudio, and a couple of differences on the main modes here and there. The good part comes with the Party Play, a classy move of simplicity which can enhance the experience and let us start to play immediately after we introduce the disc.
Read Full Review >3DJuegos
Guitar Hero 5 manages to achieve a huge leap, and brings a great game after the unremarkable Guitar Hero: World Tour.
Read Full Review >NZGamer
Guitar Hero 5 still rocks the set and is a must buy for those getting a tad bored with World Tour.
Read Full Review >SpazioGames
Guitar Hero 5 is definitely the highest point of the series, since it passed into the hands of Neversoft. Activision's game has some very interesting ideas like Play Party, Avatars in game and a lot of game modes to have fun with your friends. Some imperfections in the packaging still restrict the final judging, but all those who loved World Tour can buy this chapter without remorse.
Read Full Review >Gameplanet
The extra time and effort placed on redeveloping the party play mode has made an enormous difference to the latest Guitar Hero release. If you've been waiting for an excuse to revisit the series, this is it.
Read Full Review >Gaming Nexus
It doesn't matter if you're a longtime fan of the series or picking up the fake plastic guitar for the first time, Guitar Hero 5 has something for everybody.
Read Full Review >Gaming Age
It remains one of the best party games around, and it's still engaging and fun in a single player setting, and if you can't find people locally to play with, then the online mode will generally satisfy that itch.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club)
Allowing players to make the Cobain avatar sing “Kryptonite” by 3 Doors Down sounds the sourest note in the music-game genre.
Read Full Review >Giant Bomb
There's something about the return to a standard numbering scheme for Guitar Hero 5 that suggests to me that this is, more than anything else, a commodity, a manufactured product, albeit a very attractive and energetic one. Neversoft seems more comfortable and confident than ever with this series it has inherited, but there doesn't seem to be a lot of passion behind the craft.
Read Full Review >Teletext GameCentral
The music game bubble stays intact for another year, with no big new ideas - just lots of little ones.
Read Full Review >DarkStation
Although not the excitement that one would expect out of one of the original few Guitar Hero games, Guitar Hero 5 continues to provide a high quality music game that offers new modes, an improved overall look and feel, and a solid music outing all around.
Read Full Review >Official Xbox Magazine UK
The genre's star might be fading ever so slightly, and this game is no revolution, but it does deliver great music and a more refined band experience.
Read Full Review >Eurogamer Spain
It's the musical game of the moment, but the formula starts to look dated and needs some fresh ideas for the next entry of the franchise.
Read Full Review >GameZone
Guitar Hero 5 isn't the evolution that Guitar Hero World Tour was, and instead offers subtle changes and modest additions to the game. While the core mechanics are still fun, it seems possible that the series' creative well has been tapped dry.
Read Full Review >Destructoid
An improved experience this year, without a doubt the best of Activision's full-band games to date. There's enough here to satisfy fans of plastic instruments, and if you've got four drum sets, this is the only place you'll get to use them all at the same time. Despite its marked improvements, those who have have pledged their allegiance to other music titles likely won't be swayed, but that doesn't mean Guitar Hero 5 isn't worth your time.
Read Full Review >AceGamez
All riotous fun to play with friends at parties and gatherings but guaranteed to split the fan base clean down the middle or somewhere close.
Read Full Review >Gamer.nl
Guitar Hero has become even more user friendly. The experienced player will have a problem with the minor flaws and the lack of improvements. As a party game Guitar Hero 5 has succeeded.
Read Full Review >X360 Magazine UK
The series is beginning to lose some of the charm of its youth. [Issue#51, p.82]
games(TM)
There's an evident focus on the five-buttoned six-string as you reach the higher end of the difficulty spectrum. [Nov 2009, p.108]
PALGN
Guitar Hero 5 is what one would expect from the franchise; another solid sequel with even more songs to play with, and a whole lot more accessibility to boot.
Read Full Review >Gamervision
It has been a while since I have really enjoyed a new Guitar Hero game, and after the lackluster release of Smash Hits a few months ago, I didn’t exactly have the highest hopes for Guitar Hero 5. However, I was happy to be proven wrong, and found GH5 to be a significant improvement and Neversoft’s best full band game yet.
Read Full Review >Console Monster
On the whole, Guitar Hero 5 is, without a doubt, one of the best music rhythm titles on the market at the moment. The incredible track list, new game modes and improvements over Guitar Hero: World Tour makes this a title worthy of a purchase.
Read Full Review >GameShark
Overall, Guitar Hero 5 is technically a good game; it’s just a bit soulless.
Read Full Review >WonderwallWeb
It’s a shame that Guitar Hero has come to this. It’s not a terrible game, it's just that during development the passion seems to have been lost.
Read Full Review >My Gamer
Everyone is scrambling to say that Guitar Hero 5 is the best game in the series. I’m not sure that I’d go that far, but it’s up there. Unfortunately, the Guitar Hero series is now playing backup for Rock Band in terms of both value and quality.
Read Full Review >Gameplayer
Guitar Hero 5 focus more on gameplay rather than new plastic features and that´s the right way to go. The career mode has never been better, the versus mode is great and the design is fantastic. Now what we lack is just a good setlist with more hits.
Read Full Review >Game Over Online
But right now the Guitar Hero franchise is doing real damage to the genre by diluting the quality of its games in the attempt to cash in quickly on a formula that sells. It’s sad, and moreover it’s incredibly shortsighted.
Read Full Review >Edge Magazine
Guitar Hero 5 does stand as the most accessible version of the game concept to date, presenting a significantly tidier, more intuitive menu to get you playing sooner. [Nov 2009, p.103]
Game Revolution
If I were Bob Dylan, I might ask, “How many versions of this game must we suffer, before we get something really new? “.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this game is 6.6 (out of 10) based on 74 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Chris I gave it a9:
I don't get why people give this such low scores just because of the track list. There's more to music than the new-metal hip hop genre. Most of the songs on the game are fun to play along to and listen to, which is what makes a music game. The features 5 adds are certainly welcome, and the attention to detail is impressive as ever. The lowering of the frame rate to 30FPS was quite the annoyance; The game doesn't feel as smooth as past titles. However, the new instruments are a plus, the songs are fun, the celebrities look astounding, and this game is the second best entry in the Guitar Hero franchise, hands down. The first being Guitar Hero: Metallica.
Astor S gave it an8:
I am a Harmonix fanboy, but I'm not afraid to admit that I enjoyed this game. For groups, this game is much faster to jump into, is easier to configure mid-song, and you don't have four people squabbling over who has to sing. The setlist is lacking in heavy difficulty songs, and the hardcore gamers will definately end up replaying a select few songs. Some songs such as "Du Hast" use alternate instruments to spice up the song, but Harmonix has been just as guilty of this (i.e. Guitar Hero 2 with "Carry on Wayward Son" and Rock Band's DLC for "Smokin'"), and it only makes the song more interesting to play. Since Rock Band focuses on having every song under the sun, Neversoft sticks to adding onto the gameplay of its oversaturated franchise, and it works pretty well.
Joe Student gave it a9:
By far the most user friendly music game yet. It goes beyond just normal "get a high score" approach. The challenges make you want to go back to the career sometimes to get those extra stars. The Rockfest game mode is great because, once again, it breaks from the normal high score approach and adds different challenges and objectives. The only thing that gets me down is the setlist. Out of those 80+ songs, there are maybe 15-25 that I like, and only about 15 songs that I knew before I got the game.
Jeffrey W gave it a9:
Finally! A music game that doesn't limit your fantasies! I wish Rock Band had thought of all these innovations earlier, I mean, they DIDN'T have Drop In/Drop Out play to make the game like a jukebox (which is the greatest thing to ever grace the music game world) they DIDN'T have all those new competitive modes such as momentum and perfectionist and all the other modes from rock-fest. And while I agree the setlist is less than spectacular, it IS still very good and I actually found some new stuff to love in the list (wouldn't have EVER known Runnin' Down A Dream :P). Also, while I don't know if anyone else appreciates this, I absolutely LOVE the ability to edit the characters in your band (I was finally able to make a band of all my real-life idols :3) and the quality of the note tracks is exquisite if not perfect (although I may have a few things to say about playing keyboard, which just seems to artificially make tracks more difficult). I think Guitar Hero has mastered what a music game should be, a fun fantasy-simulator which only has the limits that you set for yourself. Don't get me wrong, though, Rock Band has the song availability down (and it still gets a 10/10 for its time), I just have a lot of complaints about the limitations of being able to control what's going on in my band (like having a band of all me :D) and not being able to play with 2 or more guitars (no one i know "likes" playing bass) and the lack of an ability to just let music play while you do something else when you get tired (jukebox!). I think if Guitar Hero just started doing it Rock Band's way with the songs from here on out, I don't think ANYONE can argue that it will be the best music game ever to grace the earth. I honestly think this game has dethroned Rock Band as the ultimate music game on the market (and I doubt LEGO Rock Band will change that). Still, point off for a not-so-glamorous setlist and rarely questionable note tracks.
Fei gave it a0:
A cash in, a commodity, no respect or honor for the artists. This is the same game with a new tracklist that couldve easily been downloaded into gh4. You are paying for presentation and a few new feature sets.
Andrew S. gave it a2:
It must be terribly soul-crushing to the developers of this series to be handed a highlight reel from your competition and told "forget your own ideas, copy this, and make sure it ships holiday 09." Anything this game has, Rock Band 2 already does and does better. In this game there is no originality. No creativity. It is just another cash-in money grab sequal with a bad setlist. It is embarrassing to see how the mighty have fallen. And Guitar Hero has certainly fallen. I give it a two rating just because in the 80+ refuse of the setlist there are a few gems.
Michael B. gave it a10:
The most user friendly, good looking, fun to play music title available. It hits all the right notes (if you'll pardon the pun), and is extremely fun. Will keep you busy for quite some time. This is a must own game for any music game fan, period.
