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DSPrice: $49.95 ($69.95 with Guitar Grip)Classification: GRating 2.5 out of 5 Guitar Heros compact Guitar Grip peripheral for the DS didnt exactly grab everyone the first time it was released last year. Some found it clumsy and cramp-inducing, e...
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William Norton8.8It’s good to see another Guitar Hero game on the Nintendo DS with it’s best incarnation ever… Guitar Hero on Tour: Decades that once again allows gamers to unleash their inner rock god through the classics which span the 1970s to the...
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Where ever you are and whatever you do there is no avoiding it... Guitar Hero is all around you!It is on your Wii, on your 360, your PS3 and of course with the release of Guitar Hero on Tour it is on your Nintendo DS.Not a filler to be seen.Never one t...
Good track selection, more options than before...
More of the same, but is that a bad thing?...
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There’s just no other way to slice it: we tried holding it several different ways, but the most comfortable position to hold the DS when playing Guitar Hero On Tour: Decades is totally diagonal. Most any other way, you’ll get cramps from holding your w...
New controller is less loose, Three career modes now, Multiplayer compatible with last game...
Still very uncomfortable, Finicky strum detection, Needs more songs...
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The success story that is the Guitar Hero franchise has been quite phenomenal. Despite everything being against the original game (like bands not wanting to hand over original recordings and the fact games requiring peripherals are, nine times out of t...
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The rhythm band genre has become a major source of revenue in the music industry. With all the licensing fees and downloadable content, the music industry has a new economic paradigm to stimulate sales. Now instead of buying the latest album from Best...
Can stream songs from DS to DS, Plenty of unlockables, Good sound quality, Multiplayer modes between DSes...
Guitar Grip becomes uncomfortable quickly, Play List is on the short side, Play List is weak...
Guitar Hero On Tour: Decades has to live up to its namesake and unfortunately is crippled by the console it is played upon. It is not a bad game and if it was a different title, it may not be judged so harshly. The controller is hard to manage with la...
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When Guitar Hero: On Tour was released last June I found that I wasn't a big fan. Despite my interest in the regular-sized versions, this portable Guitar Hero just wasn't doing it for me. It cramped my hand, never felt natural and had a piss-poor selec...
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Same problems, different game. When Guitar Hero hit the DS last year, I was very excited despite its questionable track list. I popped it into my DS, and after just a few songs my hand had cramped up and I had to move my entire body to a different pos...
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We weren't huge fans of Guitar Hero: On Tour, the DS debut for the hugely successful Guitar Hero series. It was a novel idea, and something we didn't imagine would ever appear on the DS, but it was plagued with control issues and tinny music. On Tour D...
Good multiplayer modes, Impressive achievement, Music quality isn't great, Awkward to play...
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If you have played the first one and enjoyed it, then you are golden; if you didnt then its time to put down the iPod loaded with country music and get crackin.
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Guitar Hero: On Tour - Decades isnt as much a sequel to the original On Tour game that released a mere five months ago, but more of an expansion pack with new music and new venues. Of course that didnt stop the marketing geniuses at Activision from...
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Following the stellar success of Guitar Hero's first portable iteration comes Guitar Hero: On Tour Decades, a fantastically fun musical journey through various generations of rock and roll tunes. So grab your iPod, flannel jacket, tie-dye headband and...
Great tracklist; Innovative venues and character designs...
Controls can take a toll on your wrist and hands; A bit short at 28 songs...
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Feels like a really good expansion.About four months ago Activision and Vicarious Vision did the impossible; they created Guitar Hero for the Nintendo DS, and it was good; quite good actually. So there should be no surprise that they wanted to continue...
Solid track list, Wireless sharing is awesome, All songs are originals...
Does feel like an expansion, Difficulty curve is inconsistent...
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Guitar Hero: On Tour was a smash portable hit for Activision this past summer. Much of the addictive gameplay of the Guitar Hero franchise was admirably translated to the Nintendo DS. The fret button peripheral and the touch-screen controls were satisf...
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Guitar Hero: On Tour Decades - Guitar Hero: of the Incredible Hand Cramp, as I like to call it - on the DS does an admirable job of replicating the console Guitar Hero experience. By way of the included fret attachment, which plugs into the GBA car...
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1up.com
Updated: 2012-01-25 03:11:40
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The abridged version of its bigger console brethren, Decades still provides some quality music in a portable package. Anyone's who played Rock Band or any version of Guitar Hero should recognize almost all of the selections, except here, you can play t...
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gaming-age.com Updated: 2014-09-20 02:11:18
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It's probably no surprise to a lot of you out there that the sequel to Guitar Hero On Tour, Decades, doesn't make many improvements over the first title, especially considering that the original just released 4 or 5 months ago. The guitar grip is still...
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Similar to the last instalment on the DS, Decades is a solid looking title. It obviously does not look as good as it does on any of the bigger and more powerful home consoles but that is to be expected given the hardware limitations of the DS. That bei...
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