I’m not one to toot my own gamer horn, but I’m pretty good at 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Guitar Hero and 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Rock Band. It’s been a while since I last checked, give or take a decade,ཧ but I once held the top score in the world for Snow Patrol’s You’re All I Have in Guitar Hero 5. Granted, it was DLC. I bet only a few thousand people bought it, but it remains an accolade I’ll take to my grave.

Over the years, I picked up each annual instalment and got better and better, playing with my friends using different instruments as we turned sleepovers into virtual concerts. It’s a time in the history of video games fondly remembered by many, but the desire for an annual dose of plastic instruments has long been left behind. The demand drie🧸d up, and aside from bustling communities operating on the fringes, mainstream rhythm games have fallen from grace.

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168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Epic Games has single-handedly changed that perception with the recent arrival of 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Fortnite Festival. It delivers a comprehensive rhythm exꦗperience across PC, 💖consoles, and mobile in a way that not only incorporates other aspects of the battle royale phenomena, but conjures up a modern take on Rock Band it will no doubt build upon in the months and years to come. The results are extraordinary, and we’re only days into its initial rollout.

While developer Harmonix has been working away on the digital concerts and myriad other things in the Fortnite universe since being acquired by Epic several years ago, this feels like the talented teams responsible for rhythm classics like Rock Band and Amplitude are finally being given freedom to do what they do best, even if it means incorporating past successes into a new mould. Fortnite Festival is Rock Band. Yes, it’s missing the signature colours we&♛rsquo;d come to expect from the series and there are fewer notes on the track, but the gameplay and animations are clearly inspired by the franchise, and not𒅌 once is that progenitor mentioned.

Fortnite Festival Guitar Hero and Rock Band

Right now, you can load up the Fortnite client and jump into Festival with up to three friends for a cheeky song and dance to Weezer’s Buddy Holly. All while occupying the skins of any character from Geralt of Rivia to Peter Griffin. It is beautifully excessive and utterly ridiculous and yet it works, blending in perfectly with both Rocket Racing and the existing modes we’ve all come to expect from the phenomenon. The fact it's free, with a rotating list of daily songs and challenges that can take the better part of an hour to conquer, only makes it even better.

I’d dare say this is the closest we’ll ever get to Band Hero 2, with much of the aesthetic in the vein of mainstream pop than the rock that underpinned Rock Band or Guitar Hero. Epic has already made clear the mode is here to stay, and will see the introduction of new songs and arenas on a regular basis alongside instrument peripheral support in 2024. I will not say no to picking up a plastic axe again for the first time in almost𝓀 a decade.

Guitar Hero stage featuring a lot of notes

Guitar Hero Live and Rock Band 4 were last ditch efforts to bring this genre back into vogue, but both were commercial failures despite hardcore fans sticking around until Activision shut down servers or Harmonix slowed its rollout of regular downloadable content. Clone Hero is proof that the audience for this type of game persists, and there is an appeal to playing with friends or besting a particular instrument’s conveyor belt of difficulty settings. Predictably lost with time, fans created their own subcultures in-lieu of new games in the genre. Fortnite Festival is bringing that passion back in a new, metaversal form, and one it has the resources and audience to grow far beyond anything the originaꦑl games could ever dream of.

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