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Guitar Hero II is a music game developed by Harmonix and is a direct sequel to the popular Guitar Hero. It was first released for the PlayStation 2 in November 2006 and then for the Xbox 360 in April 2007. The Xbox 360 port has content not featured in the PlayStation 2 version,[1] along with a new controller, modeled after a Gibson X-plorer.

Editions and Bundles

Two bundles were released for the game: the PlayStation 2 bundle, (pictured below) and the Xbox 360 bundle. The PlayStation 2 bundle was packaged with a Gibson SG controller, while the Xbox 360 bundle was packaged with a Gibson X-Plorer controller.

The PlayStation 2 bundle


The Guitar

Gh2-guitar-controllers

The guitar controllers bundled with Guitar Hero II: cherry red Gibson SG (PS2) and Gibson X-Plorer (Xbox 360)

The Guitar controller packaged with the PlayStation 2 is modeled after a Gibson SG. It features five fret buttons, a whammy bar, a strumming bar, and is cherry red in color. The controller packaged with the Xbox 360 version of the game is modeled after a Gibson X-plorer. It features everything that the SG controller does, but has an Xbox guide button and it is white in color.

Track List

Guitar Hero 2 has a massive 64 playable tracks, 26 of which are the original songs (Stop!, John the Fisherman, and the 24 unlockable songs).

Main setlist

1. Opening Licks

  • "Shout at the Devil" - Mötley Crüe
  • "Mother" - Danzig
  • "Surrender" - Cheap Trick
  • "Woman" - Wolfmother
  • "Tonight I'm Gonna Rock You Tonight" - Spinal Tap (Encore)

2. Amp-Warmers

  • "Strutter" - KISS
  • "Heart-Shaped Box" - Nirvana
  • "Message in a Bottle" - The Police
  • "You Really Got Me" - Van Halen
  • "Carry On Wayward Son" - Kansas (Encore)

3. String-Snappers

  • "Monkey Wrench" - Foo Fighters
  • "Them Bones" - Alice in Chains
  • "Search and Destroy" - Iggy Pop and The Stooges
  • "Tattooed Love Boys" - The Pretenders
  • "War Pigs" - Black Sabbath (Encore)

4. Thrash and Burn

  • "Cherry Pie" - Warrant
  • "Who Was in My Room Last Night?" - Butthole Surfers
  • "Girlfriend" - Matthew Sweet
  • "Can't You Hear Me Knocking" - The Rolling Stones
  • "Sweet Child O'Mine" - Guns N' Roses (Encore)

5. Return of the Shred

  • "Killing in the Name" - Rage Against the Machine
  • "John the Fisherman" - Primus
  • "Freya" - The Sword
  • "Bad Reputation" - Thin Lizzy
  • "Last Child" - Aerosmith (Encore)

6. Relentless Riffs

  • "Crazy on You" - Heart
  • "Trippin' On a Hole in a Paper Heart" - Stone Temple Pilots
  • "Rock This Town" - Stray Cats
  • "Jessica" - The Allman Brothers Band
  • "Stop!" - Jane's Addiction (Encore)

7. Furious Fretwork

  • "Madhouse" - Anthrax
  • "Carry Me Home" - The Living End
  • "Laid to Rest" - Lamb of God
  • "Psychobilly Freakout" - The Reverend Horton Heat
  • "YYZ" - Rush (Encore)

8. Face-Melters

  • "Beast and the Harlot" - Avenged Sevenfold
  • "Institutionalized" - Suicidal Tendencies
  • "Misirlou" - Dick Dale
  • "Hangar 18" - Megadeth
  • "Free Bird" - Lynyrd Skynyrd (Encore)

Bonus tracks

  • "Raw Dog" - The Last Vegas (Winner of the "Be a Guitar Hero" Contest)
  • "Arterial Black" - Drist
  • "Collide" - Anarchy Club
  • "Elephant Bones" - That Handsome Devil
  • "Fall of Pangea" - Valient Thorr
  • "FTK" - Vagiant
  • "Gemini" - Brian Kahanek
  • "Push Push (Lady Lightning)" - Bang Camaro
  • "Laughtrack" - The Acro-brats
  • "Less Talk More Rokk" - Freezepop
  • "Jordan" - Buckethead
  • "Mr. Fix-it" - The Amazing Royal Crowns
  • "The New Black" - Every Time I Die
  • "One for the Road" - Breaking Wheel
  • "Parasite" - The Neighborhoods
  • "Radium Eyes" - Count Zero
  • "Red Lottery" - Megasus
  • "Six" - All That Remains
  • "Soy Bomb" - Honest Bob and the Factory-to-Dealer Incentives
  • "The Light That Blinds" - Shadows Fall
  • "Thunderhorse" - Dethklok
  • "Trogdor" - Strong Bad
  • "X-Stream" - Voivod
  • "Yes We Can" - Made in Mexico

Characters

Main article: Guitar Hero characters

Gameplay

Guitar Hero II is based on the successful formula created for the first Guitar Hero game; the player may use the guitar peripheral to play scrolling notes by holding the corresponding fret button on the guitar neck and simultaneously pressing the strum bar. Alternatively, one can play with the DualShock 2 or Xbox 360 controller by using 4 shoulder buttons and a face button, mapped to specific fret keys.

Several changes have been made to the gameplay mechanics for Guitar Hero II: hammer-on and pull-off functionality has been improved, and three note chords have been introduced, scored as triple points if played correctly. There are additional statistics available for a song upon completion, and the scores achieved in either Quick Play or Career mode are saved to the same in-game high-score list. The handedness of the guitar can now be toggled from the Pause menu when playing a song (previously, this was only available from the game's main menu). For the Xbox 360 version, scores can also be compared with other players through Xbox Live via the Leaderboard feature, and there are 50 Achievements that can be earned in the game.

Scoring

1 note=50 points 2 note Chord=100 3 note Chord=150


Star Power is necessary to scoring and the game itself. One activate which by tilting the Guitar upwards once the Star Power meter is half full, or above. Star power can multiply 0 to 2x, 2x to 4x, 3x to 6x, or 4x to 8x. It also greatly increases the Rock meter which is useful when one is beginning to fail.

Play modes

Career

The object of career mode is to progress through a series of tiers, each containing five songs. When every song in a tier is completed, the next tier is unlocked, until the final tier is beaten.

Quick Play

In Quick Play, a player simply chooses the song he or she wishes to play, their optimal difficulty, and immediately plays the song.

Practice

Practice is new to Guitar Hero II. In practice, players can play songs or sections of songs without the prospect of failing. Players can also choose to slow songs down to make it easier.

Multiplayer

There are three different multiplayer modes available:

  • Cooperative
One player plays lead guitar while another plays either bass guitar or rhythm guitar, depending on the song. Both players share a score, rock meter, star power meter, and streak multiplier. Cooperative mode is the only multiplayer mode in which a song can be failed. Star power can only be activated by both players simultaneously.
  • Face-Off
This is the same multiplayer mode as featured in the original game, though in Guitar Hero II both players can individually select their level of difficulty. In this mode, players alternate between playing sections of each song. The scores are weighted so that a player who hits less notes on Easy difficulty may not necessarily lose against an opponent on Expert difficulty who hits more notes.
  • Pro Face-Off
Players play the full lead guitar track on the same difficulty. For the PlayStation 2 mode, this is available upon completion of any career level,[2] while for the Xbox 360 version, the mode is unlocked after completing the career mode at Medium level or higher.[3] The score system is identical as the song could be played alone, but songs cannot be failed in this mode.

While online multiplayer was not available at the release of Guitar Hero II for the Xbox 360, RedOctane has stated that they hope to be able provide this later once they are able to work out the technical issues.

Reception and awards

Impact and legacy

Achievements

See Xbox 360 Achievements: Guitar Hero II

Related Games

Footnotes

Trivia

Some of the loading screens prior to a song are jokes and references specific to that song; for example, before encores, it tells the player never to "just jam" when the audience wants an encore (a reference to the movie This Is Spinal Tap), while prior to "Jordan", the player is told that wearing a bucket on one's head won't improve one's performance, a direct reference to the song's artist, Buckethead.

The drummer spontaneously combusting at the end of "Tonight I'm Gonna Rock You Tonight" is a reference to the movie This Is Spinal Tap, from which the song originates.

The scrolling text on the walls of the school venue contains various lyrics to Alice Cooper's "School's Out".

The chalkboard in the loading screen has various jokes relating to the game on it.

Prior to playing "Free Bird", the loading screen may say, "FINE. They're NOT just heckling you this time. SIGH.", a reference to a loading screen in the original Guitar Hero that read, "They don't really want you to play 'Freebird,' they're just heckling you.", itself a reference to a common joke in musician culture.[50]

The loading screen "Throw your undies on the stage, no wait you're underage." displayed whenever playing "Less Talk More Rokk" by Freezepop, is a reference (specifically, a lyric) to the song "Super Sprøde", which is a bonus song by Freezepop in the Harmonix PlayStation 2 rhythm game Amplitude.

Clive Winston will use a violin bow to play his guitar when star power is activated with him. This is a tribute to several guitarists, most famously Jimmy Page, who would often do the same thing during performances.

Xavier Stone will sometimes pick his guitar with his teeth when using star power in homage to Jimi Hendrix.

In the sound options section, everything can be turned up to 11, in reference to Spinal Tap.

In Practice mode, the bedroom has many Rolling Stones references. A Their Satanic Majesties Request poster, Let It Bleed album, and a poster of the band themselves in the far right corner.

Clive Winston often lights his guitar on fire at the end of a performance, a reference to Jimi Hendrix's onstage antics.

At the end of the credits there is a hail to Dimebag Darrell, ex-guitarist of Pantera, who was shot on-stage while performing with his then current band, Damageplan.

In the Nilbog high school venue, the clock reads 6:66, the Number of the Beast, a reference to the Iron Maiden song of the same title.

Easter Eggs

  • On the loading screen, you can see a cherry next to a pi symbol on the chalkboard. This is a reference to the song Cherry Pie, which appears in the game.
  • The Stonehenge venue is most likely a reference to a scene in This Is Spinal Tap, in which a performance of their song "Stonehenge" goes awry.
  • The high school is Nilbog High, which is Goblin spelled backwards, a reference to the movie Troll 2.
  • The sixth tier is named after the real-life Vans Warped Tour.
  • On the floor of the Harmonix Arena there is a sign that says "the end is nigh!", like those held by street preachers.
  • Similarly, on the floor of the Harmonix Arena, there is also a chalk marking of Buckethead on the floor. This is a reference to his "Crime Slunk Scene" album.

References

  1. http://www.xbox.com/en-US/games/g/guitarhero2/
  2. RedOctane, ed (2006) (in English). PlayStation 2 Guitar Hero II Instruction Manual. RedOctane. pp. 8. 95023-226-US. 
  3. RedOctane, ed (2007) (in English). Xbox 360 Guitar Hero II Instruction Manual. RedOctane. pp. 9. 95057-226-US. 

External links

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