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Guitar Hero: Metallica First Look

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  • PS3
  • Xbox 360

We take a look at the first Guitar Hero spin-off to support guitars, drums, and vocals.

If you want a good example of the incredible growth the Guitar Hero series has undergone since its 2005 debut, last year's Guitar Hero: Aerosmith is a great place to start. It's hard to tell who exactly the headliner was in that show: the phenomenally successful band that's been around for nearly 40 years or the phenomenally successful video game franchise that's existed for a 10th of that time. No matter the answer, the formula must have worked, because Activision will soon be releasing a similar spin-off in the form of Guitar Hero: Metallica. Besides the obvious switch from bluesy hard rock to heavy metal, Guitar Hero: Metallica will differ from its predecessor by supporting the full suite of instruments bundled with Guitar Hero: World Tour while also cranking up the level of fan service packed into the game. Just yesterday, some members of the Neversoft development team dropped by the GameSpot office to give us a look at what to expect out of the final release.

The challenge that exists in creating a music game dedicated to such a massive artist is the sense of progression in the game's Career mode. After all, when you're already on top of the world, there's not a lot of vertical growth left to achieve. Neversoft's solution to this will be to replace the documentary-style approach of the Aerosmith game--which took you on a chronological journey of the band's greatest hits--with a fleshed-out storyline that puts you in the shoes of a garage band looking to achieve their dream of opening for Metallica. Animated interludes that play out between sets show a young collection of Metallica fans doing their best to win over the famous rockers, and the visual style is definitely in the rough and grungy aesthetic Guitar Hero fans are familiar with.

The progression of the game's Career mode will alternate between performances by Metallica--complete with eerily accurate character models for all four members--and performances by the upstart band featuring characters of your own creation. Metallica will be playing some of their hits, such as "Enter Sandman," "Master of Puppets," "No Leaf Clover," "The Unforgiven," and "Nothing Else Matters," alongside some lesser-known numbers, while your group will be covering the work of bands that are associated with Metallica in some way. Whether it's a group that played with Metallica, inspired them, or used them as a source of their own inspiration, there will be a wide variety of other bands' music available to you. A few examples are Bob Seger's "Turn the Page," Social Distortion's "Mommy's Little Monster," Mastadon's "Blood and Thunder," Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Tuesdays Gone," and Judas Priest's "Hell Bent for Leather"--plus an unnamed Queen song. Similarly, the venues you'll be playing in will be those taken from key moments in Metallica's career and will include the likes of the Los Angeles Forum, Hammersmith Apollo, and Tushino Airfield in Moscow.

Like the Aerosmith game before it, Guitar Hero: Metallica will have a lot of fan service for those who consider themselves big followers of the band--the only difference is that Metallica will have a lot more of it. As you progress through the game's songs, you'll unlock all sorts of bonus features, such as video of old live performances and behind-the-scenes footage at Neversoft, pictures such as backstage photos and setlists, and other audiovisual fragments of the band's history. One of the more interesting unlockables is something called "Metallifacts," which is a performance of each song in the game by the computer accompanied by pop-ups on the screen containing facts about each song. For example, if you didn't realize before that "For Whom the Bell Tolls" was inspired by James Hetfield's love for the work of Ernest Hemingway and represents one of the many examples of literary allusion in his songs, well, now you do. Further unlockables include details for each song, such as lyricist, producer, original recording date, and complete lyrics.

One thing that sets Metallica apart from a lot of bands featured in Guitar Hero games is the prominent use of double bass pedal in their drum work. For World Tour, Neversoft had to effectively cut the number of pedal strikes in half for a lot of songs on the expert difficulty level, at the risk of forcing players to upgrade their human feet into something a little more cyborg. Now they've introduced a new difficulty setting for drums called Expert+, which allows you to plug in a second kick pedal (using a splitter accessory) and play the songs with full pedals. We watched as a member of Neversoft played through one Metallica song on this setting, and at several points during the song his entire note highway was filled purple kick pedal notes. It made our feet hurt just looking at it. But you can take solace in the fact that this is a purely optional bonus setting for mildly insane drummers; normal players won't be required to drum with both pedals on the standard, beginner-to-expert difficulty levels.

This being Neversoft's second stab at the multi-instrument branch of rhythm games, it has had some time to see what works and doesn't work as far as the gameplay is concerned. What Neversoft has found is that it liked the way players mimicked songs, but there was some room for improvement in terms of how players could tell whether or not they were doing a good job of it. So Neversoft made a few small but noticeable changes to the game's heads-up display. Now your overall success gauge won't be tucked away in the upper left corner; it will be attached to each player's own note highway, so as to limit the distance your eyes need to travel between seeing which notes you're playing and seeing how well you're playing them. Another change has been made to the overall feedback system for how well you're doing as a band. If the entire group is at risk of failing a song, the edges of the screen will glow progressively redder, as you might see in a first-person shooter along the lines of Call of Duty.

One of the biggest features from Guitar Hero: World Tour, the music studio, will be available in the Metallica game. A few Metallica-specific guitar sounds have even been added, such as the ESP Truckster guitar tone. All the songs you make in the music studio here will be compatible with those made in World Tour's music studio, and vice versa. That's good news if you've created a discography's worth of Metallica-inspired tunes in the World Tour music studio and would love nothing more than to play them in Metallica's favorite venues using spot-on doppelgangers of the band. You'll have the chance to do that when the game is released this spring.

406 Comments

  • Antheran

    Posted Aug 11, 2010 4:51 am GMT

    Good fun to jam along with the songs if you can play the real thing and have friends who dnt works well with sing star too

  • kim_nielsen

    Posted Mar 29, 2009 9:39 am GMT

    I don't hope the singing is as impossible as it is in GH WT, I've played rock band and there I can sing on medium, on GH WT I almost fail on easy.

  • CreatureRising

    Posted Mar 22, 2009 10:24 am GMT

    I really want a mode where i can Sing and play guitar like james

  • epcotte

    Posted Mar 21, 2009 3:14 pm GMT

    Having just played the 4 songs in the demo, I must say I really like the gameplay. Much better than in past GH games. I'm not a Metallica fan, but I might consider getting this if the price is right, because the demo worked well for me and since it won't be only this one band. I guess that by "better gameplay", I mean that GH is finally getting as fun to play as Rock Band.

  • rynocerator

    Posted Mar 19, 2009 12:30 am GMT

    I agree with Defca, why are so many people arguing about the merrits of Metallica? What differnce does it make to anyone on this site? If you don't like the Guitar Hero series or the Metallica, why do you think its necessary to comment on this article to make sure everyone knows? For that matter, why did you read it?

  • CAINTURNER

    Posted Mar 9, 2009 10:08 pm GMT

    will the online play enable double guitars in band quick play mode...cuz I hate it when I get forced to play the bass.....

  • Ace2200

    Posted Mar 3, 2009 2:17 pm GMT

    Awesome!

  • Defca

    Posted Mar 1, 2009 3:31 pm GMT

    Quick question, why are yall having an argument about the band itself, this is gamespot... it's about games ya know? The fact that they're putting in an option for dbl bass is awesome! I HATED playing stuff like "this calling" from all that remains, hearing that sick bass and going "now why don't i get to do that?"

  • easykill_astari

    Posted Mar 1, 2009 2:36 pm GMT

    Does anyone know if it will be shipped whit a guitar/drum/mic??

  • MrEnormous52

    Posted Feb 27, 2009 11:35 pm GMT

    I really wish that Activision would stop making these little expansion-pack-like games for Guitar Hero and just make a real sequel. I would only buy one of these games if it followed someone amazing, like Hendrix or Clapton.

  • aDhAmMe13

    Posted Feb 27, 2009 1:54 am GMT

    Seems to be really polished over it's series predecessors. Expert+ seems to be my style of thing and plus, who can say no to METALLICA!!!

  • cheese4927

    Posted Feb 26, 2009 8:41 pm GMT

    Glad to see they fixed some gameplay faults that were in GHWT. Although the setlist is short, it should be really fun!

  • rippercell1

    Posted Feb 23, 2009 5:12 am GMT

    OMFG BEST BAND EVER IN GUITAR HERO I THINK I WILL WASTE AWAY INFRONT OF THIS GAME!!!! Whos with me ??? xD

  • krash1980

    Posted Feb 19, 2009 9:37 am GMT

    Warghost2k - Just the fact that you think that something can be tied to Emo "because it sounds wimpier" is enough to convince anyone with basic reasoning skills that you have minimal to zero knowledge about what you are talking about.

    And keep in mind that I am probably the only user on this pathetic forum who is actually going to survey your comment fairly rather than going off on a ****storm of stupidity like the masses of Metallica fanboys and Guitar ******* that you have coming your way.

  • Warghost2k

    Posted Feb 19, 2009 8:51 am GMT

    I understand what lordmasterrof is talking about. Was Metallica ever emo? Maybe not, but a lot of their songs from Load, Reload, and St. Anger are much wimpier than their earlier stuff. Mama Said is a good example of Metallica playing something they probably shouldn't have, but it's more "country" than "emo". Still, Death Magnetic is an awesome album, and it has reinstilled my faith in the band.

  • krash1980

    Posted Feb 19, 2009 8:33 am GMT

    lordmasterrof - While I respect the fact that you are supporting my disagreement, you went and posted one of the dumbest comments I have ever read.

    I am actually going to defend Metallica's dignity here and say, while Metallica is one of the biggest hypocritical, record-industry promoted sell-outs in the music industry they never released anything that was remotely Emo. Metallicas contemporary poseur-Metal sound borrows from Nu-Metal, Hard Rock, and traditional Heavy Metal.

    The closest link they ever had to Emo was probably during the 80's when they were playing in an authentic Speed/Thrash Metal style which was then compared to the 80's Hardcore Punk sound which then influenced 1st wave Emotional Hardcore.

    Still that theory is absurd and should be overlooked by anyone without a frontal lobotomy.

  • X4sodo4x

    Posted Feb 18, 2009 7:50 pm GMT

    When was metallica ever emo?? Get your ears checked idiot, What if metallica sold out for cash who wouldnt why would u give a #$@#$ about how much metallica made , its about the music and everything they have produced cept "st anger" & "sm" if kirk was the only one with skill as u put how come they have sold millions of records over the years??? i mean i usually like a band mostly by the vocals that are in it?? rofl i mean i aint gonna listen to boy george with kirk as the guitarist... or by ur standards that would be just cool and skillfull... go home

  • lordmasterrof

    Posted Feb 18, 2009 7:00 am GMT

    I won't agree with everything Krash says - but the thing is, Metallica did turn emo like for a short time, cause that was the trend, Lars Ulrich is a sucky drummer, and is overrated to the max, and James Hetfield is just annoying cause he always have to change the tone of the word is he using last in a sentence - the only real good musician in this band if you ask me is Kirk, he made the original sound Metallica had back then, Metallica is not was it was, there are loyal Metallica fans that will think whatever they make is good (and that's cool) then there are fans who don't wanna see them change (like me) and then there are those ignorant new generation of fans who has no idea what it ment to see Metallica rise up in the industry because of the music they made once, Metallica is a sellout now if you ask me, it's not about music but about money, and that's why i don't listen to much to them anymore, i'm fed up with everyone saying "Lars is such an amazing drummer" or "James is such a sick guitarist" cause the only one with skills is Kirk, but people wouldn't know that, if you like, that's fine, but don't defend something that is true, and that's why i say Krash is right - what he has achieved shouldn't be your buisness Shack, not if you don't have a reasonable response!

  • shack39

    Posted Feb 18, 2009 2:18 am GMT

    And what exactly have you accomplished in comparison to Metallica krash?

Game Info

  • Xbox 360 PS3 Wii Release Info

    • Release Date: Mar 29, 2009
    • ESRB: T
      Titles rated T (Teen) have content that may be suitable for ages 13 and older.
  • PS2 Release Info

    • Release Date: Apr 14, 2009
    • ESRB: T
      Titles rated T (Teen) have content that may be suitable for ages 13 and older.

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