Guitar Hero: On Tour & Guitar Hero On Tour: Decades Box Set (2008).Guitar Hero II & Guitar Hero: Aerosmith Dual Pack (2008).Guitar Hero & Guitar Hero II Dual Pack (2007).Guitar Hero Greatest Hits (Nintendo DS) (2009).Guitar Hero 2nd Edition Carabiner (2009).Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock Mobile More Music (2011).Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock Mobile (2010).Guitar Hero World Tour Mobile: Backstage Pass (2010). Guitar Hero 5 Mobile: More Music (2010).Guitar Hero III Mobile: Song Pack 1 (2008).Guitar Hero On Tour: Modern Hits (2009).Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s (2007).Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock (2007).This reboot proved unsuccessful and its GHTV online service was shutdown in 2018. However, Guitar Hero returned back in 2015 with Guitar Hero Live, developed by FreeStyle Games, the developers of the DJ Hero series. Neversoft also developed the DJ Hero spin-offs and Band Hero.ĭue to the lack of rhythm games in sales, Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock was Neversoft's final Guitar Hero game and would be the last Guitar Hero game to be developed for several years. Beenox Studios worked on Guitar Hero: Smash Hits for the consoles and Underground Development worked on Guitar Hero: Van Halen while Neversoft was working on Guitar Hero 5. While Neversoft was working on the console Guitar Hero games, Vicarious Visions worked on the On Tour series, as well as the Wii ports of the Guitar Hero games, and the iOS version of Guitar Hero. Vicarious Visions was also chosen to work on the 7th main entry of Guitar Hero in 2010 until it was canceled in 2011. From that point on, the Guitar Hero series became more focused on full band gameplay. Neversoft introduced more instruments in the fourth main series instalment, Guitar Hero World Tour, likely in an attempt to compete with Rock Band, which had released not too long after Guitar Hero III. The first Guitar Hero game that Neversoft created was Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock, and it was the most successful game in the series, by far. Activision chose a company called Neversoft to develop the next entry in the Guitar Hero series. Harmonix and RedOctane also developed a spin-off game titled Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s, but eventually RedOctane was bought out by Activision, and Harmonix by MTV. The first game was extremely successful, prompting sequel, Guitar Hero II, a year later. They partnered with rhythm game developer Harmonix, and released Guitar Hero in November of 2005. This game had only been released in Japan, and RedOctane was confident they could make a very similar game, with a comparable Guitar controller, in the west. Sometime in the early to mid 2000s, hardware developer RedOctane discovered a rhythm game made by Konami called Guitar Freaks, which used a Guitar shaped controller and featured a rock and roll based soundtrack.
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