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Giant Bomb Review

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Guitar Hero: Aerosmith Review

2
  • X360

Even if you are a hardcore Aerosmith fan, this game's short and spotty track list makes it hard to recommend.

Steven Tyler wants to wear your skin!
Steven Tyler wants to wear your skin!
Guitar Hero: Aerosmith is, according to Activision, just the first of many band-specific Guitar Hero games--a concept that I inherently find to be pretty questionable. It doesn't help that Guitar Hero: Aerosmith is a pretty slapdash product which features fewer songs, a narrower range of songs, and no DLC support, yet it commands the same premium price as Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock. A deep appreciation for Aerosmith is an obvious necessity to really enjoy this game, but even then it's missing a number of tracks by the Boston quintet that seem rather essential.

Guitar Hero: Aerosmith uses the same familiar single-player progression as previous Guitar Hero games, challenging you to complete songs in groups of five before moving on to the next set. Cleverly, the game presents each set as a full concert performance at some critical point in Aerosmith's career, starting with Aerosmith's very first performance in a high-school gym, and ending with their induction into the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame.

It's not All Aerosmith All the Time, though, with the first two songs in each set being provided by bands that have actually played with Aerosmith, including Cheap Trick, The Clash, Run DMC, The Black Crowes, Ted Nugent, and more. With the exception of Run DMC's “King of Rock,” which unnervingly features a digital DMC mouthing both vocal parts, the opening bands are all portrayed by the same house band seen in Guitar Hero III.

Once Aerosmith takes the stage, though, you'll be treated to a muppety, dead-eyed version of the band. The mo-cap looks authentic, but the exaggerations of real, recognizable people border on grotesque, with Steven Tyler looking more like an iguana than usual. There are grainy, quick-cut interviews with the bones-and-bones members of Aerosmith in between sets. The details here are thin, and it's disappointing, if not terribly surprising, that the game glosses over the band's drug-fueled meltdown in the late 70s.

Hey look! Guitar Hero!
Hey look! Guitar Hero!
The Grand mal disappointment of Guitar Hero: Aerosmith, though, is that it's oddly lacking in Aerosmith. There are but six sets of songs in the game, and with the first two songs in each set coming from opening bands, that means you get a scant 18 songs in the single-player game from the band whose name is on the front of the box. There's an additional 11 Aerosmith and Aerosmith-related songs you can unlock outside the main game, including a number of surprisingly good, bluesy Joe Perry solo songs, but there are some considerable gaps in the Aerosmith catalog.

You get most of the greatest hits, as well as a good amount of late-period filler, but the game all but ignores the band's best-selling 1993 album Get a Grip, omitting essentials like “Cryin'” and “Crazy,” as well as “I Don't Want to Miss a Thing” from the Armageddon soundtrack. Yeah, they're big, cheesy power ballads, but they're some of the band's most recognizable songs. It's telling that “Train Kept a Rollin'” serves as the big finish here, when it appeared a good six months earlier as just-another-song in Rock Band.

Besides charging the same price as Guitar Hero III while providing just a fraction of the songs, what bothers me most about Guitar Hero: Aerosmith is the fact that, not long after its release, it was made essentially obsolete by the announcement that the next full installment in the Guitar Hero franchise would follow the Rock Band template of letting you play a variety of instruments. I think there's some merit to the notion that games like this may be the future of commercial music, but the execution here reeks of an outdated mentality.

65 Comments

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duffman1990

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Edited By duffman1990

gh/rockband needs genre based games.

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HoldSteady828

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Edited By HoldSteady828

The game makes a strong case for GameFly.

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irishjohn

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Edited By irishjohn

Good review, I'm passing for sure.

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ShinyRob

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Edited By ShinyRob

This game should have been $40.

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neurochasm

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Edited By neurochasm

I rented this from Blockbuster and listlessly blew through medium while laying on my couch, played a couple songs on hard for kicks, and then took it back the next day with no intention of ever playing it again.  Most of the songs were boring. Best out of the bunch for me were Dream On, All the Young Dudes, and Sex Type Thing.

I don't understand why they're focusing on featuring one band.  If they're hellbent on releasing spinoffs, they should keep to the genre stuff like Rocks the 80's.  I'd be all over a Metal spinoff. Seventies rock and 90's grunge would be great too.  It seems like attracting fans of an entire genre rather than just one band would move more copies, but what do I know?

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Kugutsumen

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Edited By Kugutsumen

Nice try, but no banana, Neversoft. Crap setlist, zero evolution ... a Guitar Hero game built around one band is flawed from the start, one of the key charms about GH is the variety of the setlists, which is where this crashes and burns.

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lowestformofwit

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Edited By lowestformofwit

"Pink gets me [BLANK] as a kite...."

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miningguyx360

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Edited By miningguyx360

i rented this game an about halfway through, it ok but i would never buy it.

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UnsungGamer

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Edited By UnsungGamer

Well I bought the game because I happen to like Aerosmith a bit, and I thought the price tag was worth it.

The songs are great and all (and I even like some of the songs by other bands), but the difficulty progression feels messed up to me. In Rock Band I can play most songs on Hard and a handful on Expert, so I jumped into Aersomith on Hard and ended up epicly failing just about every song at least once, and have gotten to the point where I can't get any further into the game. So I travel to Medium and it's so insanely slow and easy that I've stopped playing the game.

Guess I'm a Rock Band fanboy, but it's so much better than Guitar Hero in every way.

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sandtroll

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Edited By sandtroll

This game is great as a party game, it's easier than the other games in the Guitar Hero series.

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MetalGearSunny

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Edited By MetalGearSunny

I agree 100%.

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Burrobean

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Edited By Burrobean

I'm glad I rented this instead of blowing 60 bucks.  People gave Guitar Hero Rocks the 80's a lot of crap for being just a quick cash-in on GH2,
 and with some reason.  This is GH3's equivalent.  It's the same game with less music for full price.  It's not helped by Neversoft's sub-par sense of visual design.  As Ryan says, the band members look extra-creepy.  The overuse of constant rim lighting accentuates every exaggerated crag on their zombie faces.  (I'm so scared to see what these guys do to Jimi Hendrix when they put him in GH: World Tour)

The basic gameplay is still fun, and a lot of the songs are a good time for this fan of Aerosmith's 70's catalog.  But this just isn't enough to warrant a full release.  I'll take the Rock Band approach of releasing full albums as DLC for those that need a big fix of a beloved band.  Naturally, this thing sold like hotcakes, so we'll see Activision milking this money cow again and again.  I'll rent the band editions if I like the band, but if this is any indication of what comes on them, there's no way I'm paying full price.

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Burrobean

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Edited By Burrobean

Now that there's a demo up on Xbox live that includes three of the game's best Aerosmith songs (Sweet Emotion, Dream On, and the team-up with Run DMC on Walk This Way), a fun Lenny Kravitz tune with some great Slash guitar, and some Joan Jett, there's even less point to buying the full game.  They just gave me the "greatest hits" for free.  That'll do me until I stumble across the disc in a used bin for something closer to twenty bucks.

My time and money are about to be well-spent on Rock Band 2 and all its excellent DLC, with a wait and see attitude for GH: World Tour.

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raff

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Edited By raff
 guitar hero -guns n roses , now that would have rocked!!
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natetodamax

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Edited By natetodamax

I only bought this game to farm it for achievements (lol). Other than that, it was rather disappointing. The songs are just too boring, and the band looks horendous.