Guitar Hero Metallica Iso: Las opiniones y valoraciones de los usuarios del juego
- siovithynal
- Aug 11, 2023
- 5 min read
The game is based on Guitar Hero World Tour, with support for lead and bass guitar, drums, and vocals.[4] The game has many of the same features from World Tour, including single-player and band Career modes, online competitive modes, and the ability to create and share songs through "GHTunes". In addition to the normal difficulty levels presented in Guitar Hero World Tour, Guitar Hero: Metallica provides an "Expert+" difficulty for drums that allows the use of a second bass drum pedal to match the drumming style of Metallica's Lars Ulrich. The game features 28 master recordings spanning Metallica's career and an additional 21 songs selected by members of Metallica. The band performed extensive motion capture for the game for their in-game avatars and performances. The game includes several extras including behind-the-scenes videos of the motion capture sessions, tour and concert videos of the band, and Pop-Up Video-like facts for many of the songs on the game disc.
Guitar Hero: Metallica, like other games in the Guitar Hero series, allows players to simulate the playing of rock music using special instrument controllers. The game is based on the band approach presented in Guitar Hero World Tour, and features parts of lead and bass guitar, drums, and vocals. To successfully complete songs and score, players must use the instruments to play notes that scroll on-screen in time with the music. For lead and bass guitar players, this is done by holding down colored fret buttons on the guitar neck while striking a strum bar; for the drum players, this requires the player to strike the appropriate drum pad or kick with the bass drum pedal; for vocals, the player must attempt to match the pitch of the notes through a microphone. Players earn scoring multipliers for playing several consecutive notes or phrases correctly, and by correctly completing marked phrases, players can earn Star Power which can be released for a higher scoring multiplier. If players miss too many notes, they will eventually fail the song and will have to retry it.
Guitar Hero Metallica Iso
Lead developer Alan Flores has stated that the difficulty of the game is much harder than previous games and is designed to challenge the hard-core player.[5] To meet the "ferocity" of Metallica's songs, the game features, in addition to the same five difficulty levels in World Tour, an "Expert+" mode for drummers that allows them to add a second bass drum pedal, though results of this mode are not tracked through online modes.[6] Additional drum pedals and a splitter, to allow two pedals to be used, were made available upon the game's release and as part of pre-ordering bonuses.[7] While the game allows two guitar players to play lead and bass guitar, it does not give the players the option to play lead and rhythm guitar, which does not allow for notable "Hetfield/Hammett riff-trading" on certain songs.[3] Lead designer Alan Flores explained that the decision not to track the lead and rhythm (in addition to the single player guitar, bass, drums, and vocals) "was simply a workload issue."[8]
The music creation mode from World Tour is available, giving the player the option of using tones from Hetfields' ESP Truckster guitar and Slayer's Tom Araya's ESP Bass in addition to Metallica drum sounds.[13] The "GHTunes" services, which allows players to share songs created in the music creation mode, is cross-compatible with both World Tour and Metallica.[10] In the new "Drum Over" mode for this game, players can select any song, and play drums without any fixed drum track or without any failure, allowing them to create their own drum line using the song's existing drum kit sounds.[9]
No plans have been announced for special bundled versions of Guitar Hero: Metallica with the instrument controllers within North America, though Activision does plan to release Metallica-branded faceplates for existing instrument controllers as well as a double-bass pedal attachment for the drum controller.[10] Guitar Hero: Metallica will also support the wireless microphones from Lips through a future title patch.[26] A European-exclusive bundle includes the game, wireless guitar controller, and Metallica faceplate.[27]
Reviews have primarily praised the game for a "stellar" set list that "[reads] like the quintessential 'Best Of' track list for the band",[11][39] and consider "the best hit to miss ratio of any music game to date".[41] The difficulty of the songs was also warmly received, with reviews noting that Metallica's songs can "[translate] really well to a plastic guitar",[11] and that "the songs here are a treat on any skill level".[44] However, the game still provides a difficult challenge for experienced players, and the introduction of the Expert+ difficulty for drums and the Drum Over mode were seen as good additions.[11] Reviews commented favorably on the new career progression, noting that one can complete the career mode without having to play "Metallica's earliest, shreddiest, most brutal stuff",[41] and allows the player to "skip right past the early stuff and quickly get to the big tracks".[11]
I was finally able to get the drivers so that my controller would work but now I'm having another issue. When I go to play Guitar Hero metallica in the ps2 emulator PCSX2 it's still saying I have a controller not a guitar. Is there anyway to fix this so that it's able to see I have a guitar and not a controller or are there drivers for the guitar specifically? Because atm I just have it using the xbox 360 common accessory drivers but those were the only ones I could find. Anyway if it's possible if anyone knows how to get a guitar working properly on Guitar Hero Metallica that would be great.
The problem with Guitar Hero is it's specifically looking for the guitar controller. Which is a hugely stupid mistake on Activision's part but hey, they wanna rake in that sweet mullah and sell you overpriced accessories!
This shouldn't be an issue though because the guitar controller is just emulating a normal controller. The frets are the face buttons and r1, portion for strumming should be mapped to the dpad. Try using software like lilypad. The input method from controller to our comp matters too.
I remember how it was, but you were able to play time crisis without the guncon too. It allowed for controller play and all the guitar heroes allow for it too (played like this for some time). Setting it up with pcsx2 is a different story and hopefully lilypad does the trick. @Mini Van Dan How are you connecting the controller to the computer?
yea I was able to find that I've started messing with that now to see how I can get it to work but atm no success. Because now that it's emulating a guitar and not a controller I'm having issues with it not working at all.
Well the other question is which guitar controller is it compatible with? After Harmonix and Red Octane split ways, the instrument controllers actually deviated in protocol. I think it was either for GH:3 or after, but either way, once Rock Band came out, Guitar Hero started using a different controller protocol that's not compatible with the original controllers.
Yea that's what i'm currently trying to figure out is how to bind things. I was able to find out how to change it so it see's a guitar but now I have to remap everything. But now the other issue I'm having is it's not mapping all the buttons. It only reads about 5 buttons but has maps for all of them. So I'm trying to figure out how to get the others to show up without it overriding the other maps. 2ff7e9595c
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