Harmonix announces Rock Band Blitz
Blitz is planned as a downloadable release through Xbox LIVE arcade and PSN, which might make you ask how you'll get the new instruments that are sure to ship with the game. The answer is... there are none.
"It's a single player game, primarily, you play all of the instruments, and use a controller instead of the plastic instrument to play it, and one of the great things about it is that it works with all the songs that we've already released, so there's over 3700 songs," said Nord in one of the longest run on sentences ever used in the video game industry.
Whoa- no instruments? A controller based rhythm game? How very Nintendo-esque of Harmonix. But not being limited by the instrument you're playing allows you to switch around from part to part mid song, depending on which track looks most fun to you, and which bonus multipliers you are charging up. From watching the gameplay, you'll also want to change tracks frequently to get special power notes, and keep a pinball in play. Yeah- a pinball bounces around as you play. It's not a blitz without a pinball, right?
Besides the 3700 songs that Harmonix is sure we all own already, Blitz will release with 25 songs of its own. These songs will be backwards compatible with Rock Band 3, if you miss banging on plastic instruments. Just like past Rock Band games, new songs will be released weekly so you can talk about how you wish they were different, better songs. If for some reason you don't own every song in the Rock Band library, Blitz will suggest songs for you, based on tracks you own and tracks your friends own. Also, while it is a single player game, you will have the ability to send challenges to your friends and compete on the leaderboards.
Blitz is being called "brand new" and "totally different," but it would be more appropriate to call it a return to their PS2 roots. Harmonix has already done controller rhythm games, with their first game, Frequency, and its sequel Amplitude, in 2001 and 2003, respectively. Ironically, Frequency was released on Playstation because when Harmonix pitched it to Microsoft, they were told that a music game could not succeed without custom hardware controllers.
Whether the legions of Xbox gamers feel this is true or not will be seen, when Rock Band Blitz releases this summer.
Blastoff!
Photo courtesy of G4.com
Thanks to Mcdevlin182 for the initial report.