The Grouse
Where have all the creatives gone? The Grouse explores his (lack of) options in this week's column

Look Familiar? Round and round and round they go.

They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but they neglected to mention that it’s also a crushing chokehold on the windpipe of creativity. Nowhere is this fact of life more apparent than in this fall’s lineup of upcoming and recently released video games. Look a little closer and you’ll realize—with a few exceptions—that it’s not just this season’s selection of pixelly diversions that suffer from a general lack of originality; it’s a long-running ailment endemic to the entire video game industry.

As I search for a new 3-D plaything to tempt Carpal Tunnel with in the coming months, I can’t help but think: Haven’t I played all of these games before?

Guitar Hero might be the worst thing that’s happened to video games since Uwe Boll. I remember seeing a preview version of the original game in 2005 a few months before its release. At the time, I had trouble deciding if the game was really cool, or just really goofy. Back then, I never would have predicted it to go as gangbusters as it did.

Of course, I’m joking when I say that the game is the worst thing that’s happened to the industry. Like the Nintendo Wii, Guitar Hero has broadened the appeal of video games to a mass audience that was widely considered unreachable just a few short years ago. It’s put video-game consoles into the homes of people who would never—and still don’t—consider themselves “gamers.” How can a game that’s had such a positive effect on the industry possibly be a bad thing?

Copy cats.

Guitar Hero deserves a lot respect for breaking the mold of what was popular and available around the time of its release. The game invented a completely new genre, which isn’t something that happens every day. Sadly, the mold it once shattered has been glued back together—and it’s in the shape of a stringless, plastic five-button guitar.

Guitar Hero begat Rock Band, which took the Guitar Hero formula and added drums, a mic and much-improved cooperative team play. Rock Band then begat Guitar Hero World Tour (available next month), which took the original recipe and copped Rock Band’s drums and vocals. Line up the instruments, gameplay modes and online features of Rock Band 2 and Guitar Hero World Tour, and you’ll have a difficult time spotting the difference.

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1 Comment

actually
guitar hero was made by harmonix for 1 and 2
neversoft had permission to make 3 while harmonix made rock band and stayed on rock band as well as neversoft stayed on guitar hero
neversoft is making guitar hero four with the drums and mic because harmonix gave them permission
harmonix came up with everything
as for the copy cats with gta and driver and stuff like that
u gotta think
if they r copy cats every other game is because there are several games that have similar ideas for story and weapons
all 1st person shooters (halo call of duty and gears of war) are all the same but with different capabilities
but good article


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