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20 Minutes With Mad Catz: The New Rock Band Gear

Mad Catz Player's Choice TelecasterAs you probably know by now, Mad Catz has entered into an agreement with Harmonix and MTV Games to provide instruments for Rock Band 3 (and all Rock Band products moving forward). So it seemed to me to be a good idea to set up an appointment with the venerable peripheral company at E3.

It was.

Much of what they had on display wasn’t terribly new. We’d already seen the Mustang at this point, and the high-end Squier is the one Rock Band peripheral not being made by Mad Catz (it’s made by Fender). But I learned some details about upcoming instruments that I hadn’t seen before. Let’s break it down by type.

GUITARS
The company had announced that they’d be “offering updated versions of the guitar and drum peripherals from prior versions of Rock Band,” so this was one of the first things I asked about. Turns out the update to the regular guitar isn’t much of anything: a selection of new colors (including some metallic finishes), and some subtle design adjustments that seemed to make the action of the buttons a bit more firm.

However, the company is planning on expanding the “Player’s Choice Telecaster” line (pictured above) to multiple new colors — and more importantly, to the PS3. Continue reading →

The Real (and Real-ish) Guitars of E3

Wine Red Les Paul StudioCall it a natural evolution, call it great minds thinking alike, or just call it coincidence — the music-game scene at this past E3 was all about real guitars…or reasonable facsimiles thereof. I was fortunate enough to be able to squeeze in meetings with all of the companies preparing to unleash these things on the market, and I’d like to share my experience with you. You know, if that’s OK.

And so I present to you, ranked roughly in order from least favorite to favorite: the real — and real-ish — guitars of E3.

Peavey HeroMakerPeavey HeroMaker
$TBA | Early 2011 | www.peavey.com/heromaker
Previously on Plastic Axe

As a guitar: Peavey has been making solid, if unremarkable, entry-level guitars for decades, and this seems like pretty much that: solid, but unremarkable. This is the one guitar I wasn’t able to get hands-on time with, but based on the specs — Strat-style body, one dual-coil pickup, and a fixed bridge — it seems like it will do the job fine as a training aid, but it’s nothing you’d want to take up on stage.

As a game controller: The HeroMaker takes an unusual approach to the whole real-guitar-as-game-controller thing: Only one string (the high E) has a sensor beneath it, so all of your in-game playing will be on that single string. The sensor covers 12 frets, but only recognizes the five traditional “colors,” which presumably repeat.

The technology here is optical, which appeared to offer very quick response. And since it’s optical, the guitar can detect the presence of a capo or finger when starting up, and will “zero out” at that fret — so you can move the actual in-game detection area as high as frets 8 through 12.

The guitar also includes standard guitar-controller features like a whammy bar (digital, so it works in-game only), effects switch, and d-pad.

The verdict: Looks fine enough as a guitar, but it’s almost comically limited as a game controller thanks to the single-string sensor. You can strum and fret a single string, but really — how much better is that than a regular plastic controller?

Now, the Peavey rep showed me a prototype neck being developed for a second edition, which featured optical sensors across the whole neck, allowing for play outside of the single string. That could be worth checking out. But in its current form, the guitar function and controller function are almost completely separate. It’s hard to think of a target audience for this one, given what else will be available by the time it releases. Continue reading →

Rock Band 3: The Peripherals

Rock Band 3In the course of my interview with Rock Band 3 project lead Daniel Sussman, he dropped news about all the new controllers and peripherals — some which we already knew about, and some that we did not. (And there’s even more we didn’t know about the game.) Here’s the full lineup, courtesy of MTV Games’ partnership with Fender, and their new partnership with Mad Catz.

Rock Band 3 Squier By Fender Stratocaster Guitar Controller
price TBA

Rock Band 3 Squier ControllerYeah, that’s a mouthful. I suspect we’ll just be calling it “the Squier.” But I figured I’d include the full title just this once. This is the one peripheral we know of being made by Fender; the rest come via Mad Catz. Anyway, details:

  • Fully functional, full-sized, stringed, electric guitar
  • Technology built into the neck and fingerboard tracks finger positions
  • Transmits strum data for each of the six strings
  • MIDI output

Rock Band 3 Wireless Fender Mustang PRO-Guitar Controller
$149.99

Rock Band 3 Mustang Controller

  • 17 frets, 6 buttons per neck
  • 6-string strumming area allows for discrete picking of each string
  • Touch-sensitive string box allows players to mute or cut off notes
  • MIDI output Continue reading →

Mad Catz Gets the Rock Band Hookup

Mad Catz Fender Strat ControllerOn Friday, peripheral manufacturer Mad Catz announced what in peripheral-manufacturer circles is a pretty significant get. The company, which famously paid $300,000 to not be involved in the original Guitar Hero, is now the “official global manufacturing and distribution partner for Rock Band music game peripherals.”

That means that Mad Catz, who has many years of experience manufacturing and selling peripherals — many of them for Rock Band — will be taking on a more direct role in future Rock Band releases, helping to develop, design, manufacture, and distribute controllers for Rock Band 3 and beyond.

If you ask me, this is good news. Mad Catz has been making solid, reliable peripherals for as long as I’ve been in this business, and their high-end Rock Band controllers are some of the best on the market.

Now, if they’d only tell us what’s new for Rock Band 3…

[Read]

P.Axe @ PAX: Pix!

Rock Band Tournament EntrantsWell, as I half-expected, I haven’t had as much time here at PAX to post updates as I’d hoped. Hopefully you’ve been following along on The Twitter, which I’ll certainly keep updating. But for now, I thought I’d share some pics of some of the things I’ve come across around the show.

Above, you can see a group trying out for the Rock Band tournament. The stage is set up at the end of a long hall upstairs, with these huge, beautiful windows behind and all the way down the hall. Given the setting, the sound is surprisingly good. Except for when some guy is murdering a falsetto in “Kung Fu Fighting.” You know who you are, guy.

I’ll stash the rest of the pics after the break so as not to burden those of you with slow connections. Because I care, that’s why.
Continue reading →

Plastic Axe Exclusive: Review of the Omega GM-1

Omega GM-1 ReviewDo you own a real drum set, or have the inclination to purchase one? Then I would like to direct your attention to this: the first-ever Plastic Axe video review! In just a shade under nine minutes, I’ll show you the Omega GM-1 in action, walk you quickly through installation, and talk a bit about the benefits and drawbacks of such a powerful system.

Now, as you probably remember, the GM-1 is a $250 system that includes trigger sensors for a real drum set, which carry information to a central module, which then passes it on to either a Guitar Hero World Tour drum kit (via an included MIDI cable), or Mad Catz portable Rock Band kit (via an optional, $20 adapter).

In other words, it lets you play real drums in Rock Band or Guitar Hero.

Sound interesting? Then let’s begin.

Want to know more? I’ve posted some more thoughts and notes on the review after the break. Continue reading →

Mad Catz Auctioning Strats Signed by Roger Daltrey

Wooden Strat AuctionPeripheral manufacturer Mad Catz has put two wooden Fender Stratocaster Rock Band controllers up for auction on eBay — both signed by legendary Who frontman Roger Daltrey.

The auctions are to benefit Teenage Cancer Trust, a nonprofit that “funds and develops specialist teenage cancer units within hospitals which enable young people to be treated together, by an expert team, in the best possible environment for their age group.” Daltrey is one of the organization’s official Patrons. Mad Catz is also pledging to contribute 15 percent of its sales of the controllers to the organization from now through the end of the auctions.

Both auctions start at $300, and as of this writing have no bids. I strongly suspect that will change before they end on February 10.

You can bid on the guitars and find more details here and here.