How Harmonix Is Doing A Lot More With A Lot Less In ‘Rock Band VR’

How Harmonix Is Doing A Lot More With A Lot Less In ‘Rock Band VR’

Rock Band has never really made me feel like a rock star on the account of my being rather poor at it. Sure, I could rack up some five star ratings on Normal mode after a few weeks’ practice, but anything on Hard difficulty or above, where the note structures best resemble the songs you’re playing, and I’d start to fumble about with wrong notes and missed chords. I was like a modern Hendrix…but if Hendrix had stuck to playing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star.

What Harmonix is doing with Rock Band VR, then, has me intrigued. I first saw the game at GDC last year where I displayed my instrumental inadequacy for all the world to see. While you’ll still be able to access the more traditional modes franchise veterans are used to, the experience has also been honed to really try and capture the sheer ecstasy of playing live music.

A new game mode built specifically for VR won’t require you to battle with the traditional note structure seen in the past games and countless spin-offs. Instead, Rock Band VR is far more liberal with how it lets you play songs in this new mode. You make up the chords to tracks by simply holding down any combination of multiple notes that fit the loose suggestions. The only real challenge comes from changing those chords at the right time. Alongside the visual ques, the Touch controller mounted to the end of your guitar will vibrate as a countdown for when to switch.

All you really have to do is hold a few buttons and strum along. It sounds overly simple, and it is; this edition of Harmonix’s franchise is far more concerned with letting you fully embody the role of a faultless rock god. It wants to give you the freedom to look out at the crowd as you play, move around the stage using the guitar’s whammy bar to teleport. As scary as its sounds, this is a game that is trying to make you forget who you are as you pull that Oculus Rift over your head, undoubtedly making a complete idiot of yourself in the real world, but having the time of your life in the virtual one.

We first saw this new game mode at PAX West and it’s gotten even better in the few months since. I found myself tempted to get carried away even when in a room with a bunch of developers. I managed to contain myself, simply nodding along to a beat, but little touches like being able to hit a drum symbol with your guitar stock certainly make it tempting to let loose. There’s a great air of thrashing excitement as you watch your backing singer throw herself into her microphone, or look back at your drummer to start a song.

The challenge will still be there for those that crave it, but this new direction is much more appealing to me and I suspect the many Rift owners that simply like to get lost in what they’re playing. It’s just a shame Harmonix hasn’t brought this experience to Rock Band’s entire line of instruments yet since Rock Band VR is a guitar-only experience; imagine meeting up with your friends online and really playing in a band together. But perhaps that’s best saved for another time while the studio finds its feet with this guitar-only test run.

Rock Band VR is following a hugely interesting trend of VR games watering down their core mechanics in favor of the experience. Harmonix doesn’t want you to be struggling to get to grips with tracks and getting frustrated, it wants to capture the essence of being a star that can do no wrong.

The trade-off, I think, is absolutely worth it; I can see myself spending many a VR session in my room, curtains closed, flat mates out, and me belting out the words to Gold on the Ceiling, dancing like a fool as I pretend that I’m god’s gift to mankind. Indulgent? Sure. Exhilarating? Absolutely.

Rock Band VR is due for release on Oculus Rift with Touch in early 2017.

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Check Out Rock Band VR’s First MR Trailer, Now Arriving ‘Early 2017’

Check Out Rock Band VR’s First MR Trailer, Now Arriving ‘Early 2017’

Did you find that strange lump of plastic with a hole through it nestled in with your Oculus Touch controllers when you got them last week? Keep hold of it; you might need it early next year.

As you probably discovered upon closer inspection, that little add-on is designed for Harmonix’s Rock Band VR. It houses a single Touch controller, which you fit to the stock of your Rock Band guitar to render it in-game. Recently, Harmonix confirmed that Rock Band VR is coming in early 2017. It also released a very brief look at the game, which shows the set up process you’ll go through with each performance through mixed reality.

Instead of featuring the full band experience, Rock Band VR brings the focus back to the guitar alone. In a new blog, Harmonix detailed how it was expanding playing with the instrument. You’ll still get points for hitting notes on time, but the game will also reward you for using different chords and build a combo with them, allowing you to customize how you play.

The game also features a new Performance Mode in which you’re pitted as the lead guitarist in an up and coming band. Harmonix said to think of the original games as like recording an album, requiring precision and perfection. Rock Band VR, meanwhile should be thought of more like the live performances it tries to encapsulate. The developer said that “you are still scored, but have the freedom to make the experience your own.”

Rock Band VR is expected to feature around 50 – 75 songs when it launches, and there’s the possibility for more downloadable content– something not prominently featured in VR games right now — and perhaps even an expansion to other instruments in future installations. We went hands-on with the game all the way back at GDC and then again at PAX, and it made us feel like a rock god.

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Harmonix Announces Surprise, Gear VR, Social Karaoke Game ‘SingSpace’

Harmonix Announces Surprise, Gear VR, Social Karaoke Game ‘SingSpace’

Harmonix, the studio that popularized the rhythm-accessory video with Guitar Hero and now continues the tradition with Rock Band, are today announcing a new music-based gaming experience for the Samsung Gear VR.

SingSpace was a surprise addition to the demo room of the Oculus Connect 3 virtual reality convention in San Jose. The company had not previously given any indication that it was working on any other virtual reality properties aside from the two it has already announced: Rock Band VR and Harmonix Music VR.

SingSpace is designed to let you croon your favorite hits in an immersive digital karaoke parlor while a mass of robot onlookers react to your performance in real time. The game uses a version of the now familiar Harmonix line-and-arrow system to gauge your vocal performance. Well executed tunes will earn the admiration of the robots in the crowd and failure will lead them to lose interest in you all together.

To start with you will be creating a custom avatar for your performances that can be customized to your liking. You’ll see this virtual representation of yourself on large screens in the parlor as you move through the songs and sources from the company confirmed that there will be a deep variety of different options to make your character your own.

The company also explained that social is going to be one of the driving forces behind SingSpace. Currently, up to four friends can gather together to sing a song as a group or watch one of their compatriots stumble his way hilariously through the routine.

As far as the songs themselves are concerned, Harmonix declined to comment on the show floor on the exact number or nature of the tracks that will come included in the initial release for SingSpace, but they did mention that they are working on cultivating a “deep robust catalogue that contains all of the songs one would expect to see in any modern karaoke bar…but we have yet to finalize those arrangements.”

UploadVR witnessed the power of SingSpace first hand when one of our editors brought the entire demo hall to a complete stand still, prompting some to even pause their demos all together, as he belted out the words to “I Will Survive” with an almost supernatural disregard for his surroundings.

So far, SingSpace seems to be fun, innovative, and a perfect fit for a mobile platform like the Gear VR. Harmonix is targeting a Spring 2017 release date for the game and we will bring you more information on its pricing model and additional features as that date approaches.