DJ Hero

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Format:PlayStation 3
Manufacturer:ACTIVISION
Category:Video Games
Genre:Music
SMS Code:PS3DJ01
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£109.99

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new seller 123stanners £60.00 please login for SellTo
I say used but not much around 2-3 times since bought as a christmas present just to see if i liked it, not my sort of music though, and therefore i would like to sell it, its ideal for someone who likes djing or that kind of music, in excelent condition no scratches or wear n tear, comes in original box good as new.

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DJ Hero

DJ Hero delivers an all-new interactive music experience that allows players to rule the party and not only experience, but to hear music in an all-new way. With over 100 individual songs, highlighted in over 80 unique never-before-released mixes that blend genres of music, including hip-hop, R&B, pop, rock and electronica, DJ Hero delivers the most diverse and international collection of music ever assembled in a music game by incorporating anthems from legendary artists.

Created exclusively for DJ Hero, the turntable controller immerses fans into the authenticity of DJ culture and a sea of music as they utilise and master various DJ techniques including scratching, blending, cross fading and sampling, while leaving room for creative expression with a variety of effects and player chosen samples and scratches, transforming a face in the crowd into the life of the party.

  • Start The Party, Rule The Party: From intimate settings to the largest club events around the world, the DJ is the life of the party. DJ Hero gives gamers a chance to step to the front of the room in the most socially expressive experience by combining exhilarating gameplay, the hottest music and world-class DJs with the all-new turntable controller.
  • Music Sounds Better With You: With over 100 individual songs included on-disc, highlighted in over 80 original exclusive mixes, DJ Hero compiles a massive set list spanning hip-hop, R&B, pop, rock, electronica, and almost everything in between, from world renowned artists like David Bowie, Blondie, Justice, Marvin Gaye, KRS-1, Beastie Boys, Gorillaz, N.E.R.D, Nirvana and 50 Cent.
  • Bust A Move: DJ Hero drops the needle on the record for gamers and immerses them in common DJ techniques including mixing, sampling and various scratch patterns while offering social expression with freestyle effects and samples. Accessible to many audiences, all will feel comfortable spinning on the turntable controller that blends the unique DJ Hero gameplay with a host of authentic DJ cultures. So don't just stand there, bust a move!
  • Battle The Best or Scratch And Strum With The Rest: With DJ competitions playing a large role in DJ culture, from impromptu battles to the DMC World DJ Championships, inclusion of the DJ vs. DJ competitive game mode is a natural fit, giving beat chemists the option to battle head-to-head to determine virtual DJ supremacy. Additionally, two DJs can mix and scratch together on multiple turntable controllers, a player can join in to emcee over any track in the game with a mic or, using a Guitar Hero guitar controller along with a turntable controller, gamers can perform a series of infamous DJ-guitar exclusive mixes, just as many of the artists in DJ Hero have.

Announced Tracks:

David Bowie, Let's Dance VS KRS-1, Jack Of Spades

Zombies, Time Of The Season VS Chuck Brown, Bustin Loose

Grandmaster Flash, Here Comes My DJ VS Gary Numan, Cars

Herbie Hancock, Rockit VS N.E.R.D., Lapdance

Grandmaster Flash, Boom VS Grandmaster Flash, Tap

Dizzee Rascal, Fix Up, Look Sharp VS Justice, Genesis

Gwen Stefani, Hollaback Girl VS Rick James, Give It To Me

Jurassic 5, Jayou VS Herbie Hancock, Rockit

Tears for Fears, Shout VS Eric Prydz, Pjanoo (Radio Edit)

Marvin Gaye, I Heard It Through The Grapevine VS Gorillaz, Feel Good Inc

Black Eyed Peas, Boom Boom Pow VS Benni Benassi, Satisfaction

Jay Z, Izzo (H.O.V.A.) VS Eminem, My Name Is

Beastie Boys, Sabotage VS Foo Fighters, Monkey Wrench

Eurogamer Review

8/10

The turnaround has been astonishing. Guitar Hero launched in 2005, its first set-list composed extensively of cover versions, with the music industry's nostrils too busy sweeping lustily over cisterns to pay it much heed. Developer Harmonix was virtually required to shuffle up to record label doors, cap in hand, begging for whatever scraps of licensed music were lying around.

$2 billion and 25 million sales later, someone else is now wearing the trousers in this increasingly noisy relationship, and so DJ Hero arrives this week with an emperor's fanfare and a marketing budget beyond the wildest fantasies of the original Guitar Hero team. Indeed, as I type this, fizzing flutes are clinking at the DJ Hero London launch bash where, the game's official Twitter feed hics, "DJ Shadow two hour set rocked the house!" Not this one, buddy.

But the point is that DJ Shadow features heavily in the game, both as content and semi-shrouded avatar. And he's hardly alone. Jay-Z, Eminem, Daft Punk, Grandmaster Flash, Scratch Perverts, Z-Trip and DJ Yoda are just some of the Who's Who of stars actively involved in the project, from inception through to release.

Somewhere beneath this megabucks power-mongering is FreeStyleGames, and a tale of two studios: one in glamorous Leamington Spa, handling the game development; the other in trendier east London, devoted exclusively to mix-creation. It's this that starts to mark DJ Hero out as something different from other music games.

The 93 mixes on the game disc, blended from a pool of some 100 tracks, have been created exclusively and specifically for the title. At best, a Guitar Hero or Rock Band product is a game and a greatest hits compilation. DJ Hero's vital, varied, surprising and vast musical content is as fresh to a music gamer's ears as the gameplay is to their fingers.

It's brilliant. Different strokes for different folks and all that, but it's hard to imagine any interested gamer not finding something to inspire them here, whether it's the cocksure Euro-sleaze of Queen crowned by Daft Punk, the prankish eargasm of Vanilla Ice melted into MC Hammer, or the synapse-frying relentlessness of Scratch Perverts' Noisia.

The music is divided into 24 distinct sets, some artist-specific - "Jay-Z Mixtape", "DJ Shadow presents", and so on - others compiled thematically by FreeStyle. This provides a compelling structure that accentuates the game's unexpected diversity, with some sets leaning heavily on frenzied scratching, while others fly more familiar button combos down the vinyl track at the player.

Let's talk turntable. While DJ Hero's peripheral carries the unmistakable, Fisher Price 'my first instrument' look pioneered by Guitar Hero, it feels pleasingly sturdy and, in the main, performs its tasks admirably - with one notable exception, which I'll come to.

First, to recap how it all works: to simulate real-world dual turntables without requiring the player always to look down at the controller, blue and green buttons on the single platter represent left and right. The platter rotates freely in both directions through 360 degrees, though the only time you're required to give it a full spin is when activating 'Rewind' - a skill reward allowing you partially to roll back and replay to boost your score. Otherwise, short, sharp scratching is in order to match the on-screen patterns.

Mixes are performed by button-matching and scratching in time, switching left and right with the crossfader, then layering samples - either scripted, via the platter's central red button, or freeform via the 'euphoria' button at relevant points - and bending audio in real-time by twiddling an effects knob.

I've no doubt there will be many self-regarding 'real' DJs queuing up to call out Hero's inaccuracies and inconsistencies as a DJ experience. I can't comment directly since I don't DJ; what I can say, as a Guitar Hero-worshipping guitar player, is that I see such opinions as I do those of the binary-minded bores who scorn Guitar Hero because you can't suddenly break out into a minor mixolydian flourish mid-song. To do so is to miss the point spectacularly; the failure is one of imagination. What should be focused on ought to be obvious: how engaging it is as a game, and whether the simulated experience is actually fun.

A neatly-constructed training mode guides you through the various gameplay features step by step. This will be necessary for most, since there's a lot to digest, much of it of the rubbing-head-while-patting-tummy variety.

As with Guitar Hero, difficulty is graded Easy, Medium, Hard and Expert. On the easiest setting, the commands move towards the player the slowest, with strictly limited inputs required. Medium ups the ante with more adventurous crossfading and combinations. Hard raises the stakes considerably, adding specific directional scratching, and complex multi-tasking routines to master. Finally, Expert, in a similar fashion to Guitar Hero, tasks the player with performing every relevant detail: every note in Guitar Hero translates to every scratch in the mix - as implemented by FreeStyleGames' resident scratch man, DJ Blakey.

The experience is infinitely less fulfilling and engaging on the lowest setting. But whereas the palpable thrill of clutching a guitar compensates for the funereal Easy note tracks in GH and Rock Band, occasionally jabbing at the odd button or dial on a table or laptop tray is relatively dreary and charmless.

Crank it up a few notches, however, and it soon becomes clear that FreeStyle has created a thrilling, involving, refreshing, frequently sublime music game which, at its best, is effortlessly as good as any other rhythm action game I've played.

The learning curve is steep, and will prove a little dizzying to some at first. Practice, patience and persistence are essential if you aspire to conquer the game's most terrifying mixing peaks. But DJ Hero has been structured fabulously to nudge you gradually closer to the summit, with each progressive setlist ratcheting up the challenge, regardless of difficulty level.

I pick up rhythm-action games quicker than most, and found I could negotiate the earliest tracks on Expert in no time at all. A week and a half after getting the game, playing it several hours a day, I'm still a million miles away from handling Scratch Perverts' Noisia - DJ Hero's equivalent of Through The Fire And Flames in Guitar Hero. If you're looking for challenge, DJ Hero smashes you in the face with it while tasering your balls.

What also delights is how 'videogamey' the music can be. Noisia essentially plays out like a multi-wave boss battle, with speech samples you launch taunting your abilities as the range and complexity of sequences is cranked up brutally. It displays an acute understanding of great rhythm-action gaming, as well as a refreshing self-awareness and sense of playfulness.

Happily, the turntable controller is as easy to use lying on the sofa as it is sat at a table or with it resting on the lap. But if, like me, your music game experience remains incomplete without a dignity-crushing performance element, nothing beats playing the game standing up with the turntable on a flat surface. On my own in my flat, I routinely find myself jigging in my imaginary booth, punching the air to rally my fantasy crowd as the beat goes on. Embarrassing and pathetic in equal measure, but loads of fun.

One very clever thing DJ Hero does is to create the illusion that you are actually making music. When an orange arc appears above a track, the effects dial can warp the music in real-time; outside of this the knob switches between a pre-selected list of cheesy samples that can be engaged during certain sections of the centre track by pressing the 'euphoria' button (euphoria is the equivalent of star power). And while cross-fading is entirely scripted, the combination of these elements - particularly on higher difficulty - offers an illusion of creative freedom not found in Guitar Hero.

Which is why it's disappointing that there are so few sample lists to choose from, ensuring that what is a novel if silly delight at first quickly loses its appeal through over-use. FreeStyle would do well to add a bunch more for free via DLC sooner rather than later.

Less compelling is the support included for guitar peripherals. It's not hard to guess why the developer has added this feature, and on the music side at least, thought has been put into creating rockier mixes with the likes of The Killers, Weezer, Motorhead and Foo Fighters making an appearance. But while the small number of guitar tracks play exactly as they would in Guitar Hero, playing through riff loops isn't the most fun in the world.

I also wonder, for all the talking-up of the game's universal appeal and accessibility, whether it's really that great for a casual user. You can't fail any songs, which is a pretty big and largely sensible gesture to this audience. And, since 93 exclusive mixes is in itself a pretty big draw, the drop-in-drop-out Party Play mode is an obvious but nevertheless welcome addition. Yet this is undermined, inexplicably, by most of the music remaining locked off at the start, requiring a large investment of time to make available.

This structure engages experienced gamers extremely well. But I'm still amazed that in 2009 - when even Guitar Hero and Rock Band have wised up - a supposed party game shuts most of its entertainment away needlessly. Does The Beatles: Rock Band's career mode suffer because you can play any song at any time? Of course not.

DJ Hero's party credentials take a further knock with the rather mundane multiplayer, which seems to have been added in with little thought on how to make it exciting. There's no engagement between players, and the score-chasing actually makes for a more tedious experience than single-player as both sides tweak frantically at the effects knob to eke out extra points, where you should be encouraged to apply it more artfully. It's there, and it works smoothly, but it's underwhelming and an area one would expect will receive greater attention in the inevitable sequel.

But perhaps the biggest issue of all is with the crossfader bar on the controller. Switching all the way between left and right works fine as there are definite endpoints. The problem comes when you're required to move rapidly to the centre and out again. There is resistance there allowing you to feel when you're centrally positioned, but it isn't quite enough and so initially results in lots of frustration as you go too far one way or the other and screw up a passage. The good news is, after a week and half's play, it's become largely instinctive (though not flawlessly so), but that's in spite of, not because of the controller.

It's a relatively minor quibble in a game I remain blissfully hooked on. In many ways DJ Hero is a triumph, offering one of the most refreshing gaming experiences of the year and one of the best soundtracks of any music game. If you're a genre fan wearying of endless guitar-based updates, this is a thrilling shot in the arm; and if you're the type of rhythm-action gamer who relishes a ferocious challenge, you can probably add another mark onto the score.

Weak multiplayer and control issues prevent it from being the instant classic Guitar Hero was four year ago, but FreeStyleGames has nevertheless created a slick and enormously enjoyable music game that deserves to succeed and evolve.

Comments

ch4rz1t0 avatar

2009-10-18 23:53:02 - ch4rz1t0 wrote:

  "W8ntg for a long time"


I think this game gonna beat guitar hero ...

Its a beutiful game !!!

DJing FTW!!


pers avatar

2009-10-07 12:18:50 - pers wrote:

  "full list of tracks"


• 2Pac - “All Eyez On Me” vs. The Aranbee Pop Orchestra - “Bittersweet Symphony (Instrumental)”

• 50 Cent - “Disco Inferno” vs. David Bowie - “Let’s Dance”

• 50 Cent - “Disco Inferno” vs. InDeep - “Last Night A DJ Saved My Life”

• Afrika Bambaataa - “Zulu Nation Throwdown” vs. Freedom Express - “Get Down”

• Beastie Boys - “Here’s A Little Somethin’ For Ya” vs. DJ Shadow - “The Number Song (2009 Version)” (Produced and mixed by DJ Shadow)

• Beastie Boys - “Intergalactic” vs. Blondie - “Rapture”

• Beastie Boys - “Lee Majors Come Again” vs. Daft Punk - “Da Funk” (Produced and mixed by Cut Chemist)

• Beck - “Where It’s At” vs. DJ Shadow - “Six Days (Remix ft. Mos Def)”

• Bell Biv DeVoe - “Poison” Beat Juggle

• Bell Biv DeVoe - “Poison” vs. Beastie Boys - “Intergalactic” (Produced and mixed by DJ AM)

• Bell Biv DeVoe - “Poison” vs. Cameo - “Word Up!”

• Benny Benassi - “Satisfaction” vs. Tiësto - “Elements Of Life”

• Billy Squier - “The Big Beat” vs. N.E.R.D. - “Lapdance” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Black Eyed Peas - “Boom Boom Pow” vs. Benny Benassi - “Satisfaction”

• Bobby “Blue” Bland - “Ain’t No Love In The Heart Of The City” vs. 2Pac - “How Do You Want It”

• Bobby “Blue” Bland - “Ain’t No Love In The Heart Of The City” vs. Connie Price & The Keystones - “Fuzz And Them”

• Boogie Down Productions - “Jack Of Spades” vs. David Bowie - “Let’s Dance” (Produced and mixed by DJ Shadow)

• Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers - “Bustin’ Loose” vs. The Zombies - “Time Of The Season” (Produced and mixed by DJ Shadow)

• Chuck Brown & The Soul Searchers - “Bustin’ Loose” vs. Young MC - “Bust A Move”

• Common - “Universal Mind Control (U.M.C.)” vs. Masta Ace - “Jeep A** Gutter (Aaron LaCrate & Debonair Samir RMX)” (Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts)

• Cypress Hill - “Insane In The Brain” vs. Classics IV - “Spooky”

• Cypress Hill - “Insane In The Brain” vs. David Axelrod - “The Edge”

• Daft Punk - “Around The World” vs. Young MC - “Bust A Move”

• Daft Punk - “Da Funk” vs. N.A.S.A. - “Strange Enough ft. Karen O, ODB & Fatlip”

• Daft Punk - “Megamix 1”

• Daft Punk - “Megamix 2”

• Daft Punk - “Robot Rock” vs. Hashim - “Al Naafyish (The Soul)” (Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts)

• Daft Punk - “Robot Rock” vs. Queen - “We Will Rock You”

• Daft Punk - “Short Circuit” vs. Boogie Down Productions - “Jack Of Spades”

• Daft Punk - “Technologic” vs. Gary Numan - “Cars”

• Daft Punk - “Television Rules the Nation” vs. No Doubt - “Hella Good”

• David Axelrod - “The Edge” vs. Eric B. & Rakim - “Eric B. Is President”

• Dizzee Rascal - “Fix Up, Look Sharp” vs. DJ Shadow - “Organ Donor (Extended Overhaul)”

• Dizzee Rascal - “Fix Up, Look Sharp” vs. Justice - “Genesis”

• DJ Shadow - “Six Days (Remix ft. Mos Def)” vs. D-Code - “Annie’s Horn”

• Eminem - “My Name Is” vs. Beck - “Loser”

• Fedde Le Grand - “Put Your Hands Up For Detroit” vs. Sandy Rivera and David Penn - “I Can’t Stop (David Penn Remix)”

• Foo Fighters - “Monkey Wrench” vs. Beastie Boys - “Sabotage” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Foreigner - “Juke Box Hero” vs. DJ Z-Trip ft. Murs - “DJ Hero” (Produced and mixed by DJ Z-Trip)

• Foreigner - “Juke Box Hero” vs. DJ Z-Trip ft. Murs - “DJ Hero” (DJ-Guitar mix, produced and mixed by DJ Z-Trip)

• Gang Starr - “Just To Get A Rep” vs. Mobb Deep - “Shook Ones, Pt 2” (Produced and mixed by J. Period)

• Gorillaz - “Feel Good Inc.” vs. Blondie - “Atomic”

• Grandmaster Flash’s - “Boom” vs. “Tap” (Produced and mixed by Grandmaster Flash)

• Grandmaster Flash, DJ Kool, DJ Demo - “Here Comes My DJ” vs. Gary Numan - “Cars” (Produced and mixed by Grandmaster Flash)

• Gwen Stefani - “Hollaback Girl” vs. Gorillaz - “Feel Good Inc.”

• Gwen Stefani - “Hollaback Girl” vs. InDeep “Last Night A DJ Saved My Life” (Produced and mixed by DJ AM)

• Gwen Stefani - “Hollaback Girl” vs. Rick James - “Give It To Me”

• Herbie Hancock - “Rockit” Beat Juggle

• Herbie Hancock - “Rockit” vs. N.E.R.D. - “Lapdance” (Produced and mixed by Grandmaster Flash)

• InDeep - “Last Night A DJ Saved My Life” vs. Cameo - “Word Up!”

• Jackson 5 - “I Want You Back” vs. Gang Starr - “Just To Get A Rep” (Produced and mixed by DJ Yoda)

• Jackson 5 - “I Want You Back” vs. Third Eye Blind - “Semi-Charmed Life” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Jackson 5 - “I Want You Back” vs. Third Eye Blind - “Semi-Charmed Life”

• JAY-Z feat. Pharrell - “Change Clothes” vs. 2Pac - “All Eyez on Me”

• JAY-Z - “Izzo (H.O.V.A.)” vs. Eminem - “My Name Is”

• JAY-Z - “Izzo (H.O.V.A.)” vs. Jackson 5 - “I Want You Back”

• JAY-Z - “Excuse Me Miss” vs. Rick James - “Give It To Me”

• Jean Knight - “Mr. Big Stuff” vs. Masta Ace - “Born To Roll”

• Jurassic 5 - “Jayou” vs. Billy Squier - “The Big Beat”

• Jurassic 5 - “Jayou” vs. Herbie Hancock - “Rockit”

• Kid Cudi - “Day ‘N’ Nite” vs. Black Eyed Peas - “Boom Boom Pow”

• Kool Moe Dee - “How Ya Like Me Now” vs. Reel 2 Real featuring The Mad Stuntman - “I Like To Move It”

• Little Richard - “Tutti Frutti” vs. Shlomo - “Beats” (Produced and mixed by DJ Yoda)

• M.I.A. - “Paper Planes” vs. Eric B. & Rakim - “Eric B. Is President” (Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts)

• M.I.A. - “Paper Planes” vs. Wale - “Lookin’ At Me”

• Marvin Gaye - “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” vs. David Bowie - “Let’s Dance”

• Marvin Gaye - “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” vs. Gorillaz - “Feel Good Inc.”

• Motörhead - “Ace Of Spades” vs. Noisia - “Groundhog” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• N.A.S.A. - “Strange Enough ft. Karen O, ODB & Fatlip” vs. Isaac Hayes - “Theme From Shaft”

• Noisia - “Groundhog” Beat Juggle (Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts)

• Paul van Dyk - “Nothing But You” vs. Sandy Rivera and David Penn - “I Can’t Stop (David Penn Remix)”

• Public Enemy - “Shut ‘Em Down” vs. Beck - “Where It’s At”

• Public Enemy ft. Zakk Wylde - “Bring The Noise 20XX” vs. Justice - “Genesis” (Produced and mixed by DJ Z-Trip)

• Public Enemy featuring Zakk Wylde - “Bring The Noise 20XX” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Q-Tip - “Good Thang” vs. Billy Squier - “The Big Beat” (Produced and mixed by J. Period)

• Queen - “Another One Bites The Dust” vs. Beastie Boys - “Brass Monkey” (Produced and mixed by DJ Z-Trip)

• Queen - “Another One Bites The Dust” vs. Daft Punk - “Da Funk”

• Rihanna - “Disturbia” vs. Kid Sister - “Control”

• Rihanna - “Disturbia” vs. The Killers - “Somebody Told Me” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Rihanna - “Disturbia” vs. The Trammps - “Disco Inferno”

• Shlomo - “Beats” vs. Billy Squier - “The Big Beat”

• Street Sweeper Social Club - “Fight! Smash! Win!” vs. Beastie Boys - “Intergalactic” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Tears For Fears - “Shout” vs. DJ Shadow - “Six Days (Remix ft. Mos Def)”

• Tears For Fears - “Shout” vs. Eric B. & Rakim - “Eric B. Is President” (Produced and mixed by DJ Jazzy Jeff)

• Tears For Fears - “Shout” vs. Eric Prydz - “Pjanoo”

• The Aranbee Pop Orchestra - “Bittersweet Symphony (Instrumental)” vs. LL Cool J - “Rock The Bells” (Produced and mixed by DJ Jazzy Jeff)

• The Scratch Perverts Beats and Pieces (Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts)

• The Killers - “Somebody Told Me” vs. Eric Prydz - “Pjanoo”

• Vanilla Ice - “Ice Ice Baby” vs. MC Hammer - “U Can’t Touch This”

• Vanilla Ice - “Ice Ice Baby” vs. Paula Abdul - “Straight Up”

• Wale - “Lookin’ At Me” vs. Black Eyed Peas ft. Tippa Irie - “Hey Mama”

• Weezer - “Beverly Hills” vs. Evidence, The Alchemist, Aceyalone, Rakaa & 88 Keys - “Fresh Rhymes And Videotape” (DJ-Guitar mix)

• Wild Cherry - “Play That Funky Music” vs. Gang Starr - “Just To Get A Rep” (DJ-Guitar mix)


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