Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s [PS2]

Overall Score

4 stars - Click for rating criteria
Pros:
C'mon, Flock of Seagulls, Ratt, and Billy Squire in one game?
Cons:
What's with that Anthrax song?
  • Graphics 3 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Sound 4 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Gameplay 4 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Story 0 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Interface 4 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Multiplayer 4 stars - Click for rating criteria

Guitar Hero is gonna rock you like it's 1989.

yahoo

By: Tom Chick

Given that Guitar Hero is so awesome, there's not a lot you can say about Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s beyond that it's awesome, but with bigger hair and gaudier colors. This collection of thirty new songs for the Playstation 2 version is the fond farewell from Guitar Hero creator Harmonix before they move on to bigger venues with Rock Band and pass the Guitar Hero name over to another developer.

Seeing as how the Xbox 360 only has Guitar Hero II and a desultory collection of downloadable song packs, Rocks the 80s solidifies the PlayStation 2 as the platform of choice for guitar heroics. This new song list is designed to appeal to anyone who has a soft spot in his or her heart for 80s icons like Flock of Seagulls or Quiet Riot. A couple songs use their original vocalists, but most of them are solid soundalikes.

There's nothing here that will make you cringe like, for instance, the Kurt Cobain imitator in Guitar Hero II. However, this is a slightly disappointing collection in some ways. After Rockstar managed to assemble the definitive 80s soundtrack for Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, it's a bit disappointing that Harmonix seems to have taken a few shortcuts and saved a few bucks by skipping some bands and opting for lesser known songs from others. "Police Truck" from the Dead Kennedies? "Wratchchild" from Iron Maiden? And where are Van Halen and Guns n' Roses? For sheer cheese value, how can you leave out Styx and Foreigner?

But part of the fun of any Guitar Hero game is kvetching about the song list and what should have been in there. So it's hard to complain for too long when the tracks include notable songs like Asia's "Heat of the Moment," Eddie Money's "Shakin'," The Vapors' "Turning Japanese," 38 Special's "Hold on Loosely," The Romantics' "What I Like About You," and Scorpion's "No One Like You." Even if you don't like these songs (Heat of the Moment, for instance, might have been better in theory than practice), they're a varied cross-section of progressive rock, pop, and metal from back then. Even the most vehement detractors are sure to find ten songs they don't mind and five they love in the course of playing through the campaign to unlock everything.

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Posted: 21 Jul 2007

Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s
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