Where Did Your DLC Go?

•March 13, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Bad blogger, no biscuit: We were playing the other day and the song we wanted wasn’t listed. Shock! Horror! It had just been there!

Turns out that the metadata is screwy on a few songs (The Police Pack, Limelight, El Scorcho) and when you sort by genre those just disappear. You can re-download them to fix, because Harmonix, awesome peeps they are, patched the downloadable songs.

One Way to Have a Rock Band Party

•March 13, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Here’s an awesome recap of the Rock Band party from Wired’s Game|Life blog. Check it out. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll say that it has a good beat and you can dance to it.

Busting that Fourth Wall

•March 13, 2008 • Leave a Comment

DC-based breadpig took their Rock Band to the streets. And filmed it. This is made of awesome.

What Should the Next Version of Rock Band Have?

•March 12, 2008 • Leave a Comment

The title of this post says it all. Or asks it all, whatever. Rock Band is good, but could be so much more! What do you think should be added (or subtracted)?

  • Replay feature, so you can watch the concert footage of your band after you play?
  • A keyboard controller, to play the harmonica, accordion, cello, or even keyboard parts?
  • A mashup with DDR, so you can get points for doing various cool moves while playing?
  • A better user interface, so you don’t have to back out 6 screens to set the calibration, then go back in through 6 screens?
  • The ability to select the avatar for NPCs in your band?
  • The ability to add whatever songs you want, including your own compositions?
  • The ability to compose songs in Rock Band?

Here’s what Harmonix said in January:

Rock Band may not have reached the sales stratosphere of the Guitar Hero franchise just yet, but those who own or who have had a chance to play the game know that it can be extraordinarily fun to play. While the setlist of songs selected by Cambridge, Mass.-based developer Harmonix in Rock Band is certainly decent (and more are added via downloadable content each week), some gamers who are more musically inclined or who actually have their own real band would love nothing more than to put their music in the game.

In a new interview with Boston.com, Harmonix’s VP of Product Development Greg LoPiccolo was asked if a compiling program that would allow a band to convert its songs into playable Rock Band tracks might be conceivable. He answered, “It is conceivable, and would be awesome. We continue to talk about this possibility. I can’t commit to such a thing at this point, but would love to tackle it if we could find a way.”

Of course, the idea of transforming Rock Band into a user-generated platform (a la LittleBigPlanet) where players could create and share/play each other’s music could be truly amazing and could possibly represent the next step in the evolution of this music game genre.

Later on in the interview he comments that the team is “working on improvements that are obviously missing from the current version of Rock Band, as well as some crazy stuff that no one will expect, but promises to kick ass.”

LoPiccolo was also asked about the Wii since Rock Band is not available on Nintendo’s platform. Wii owners shouldn’t fret, however, as Harmonix is “psyched about the Wii, and would love to bring our stuff to the Wii audience.”