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Okay, I admit: DJ Hero is harder than it looks photo

While I run the risk of sounding like an ass, I always thought FreeStyleGames' DJ Hero looked kind of... easy.

Make no mistake, since I first saw the game in action it always looked like it would be a lot of fun. The soundtrack promised to be killer, and based on what I had heard, I was sure it was going to deliver. But despite the new controller and my unfamiliarity with an actual turntable, watching the game being played on the most difficult levels never seemed all that difficult at all, actually. 

About a month ago, Activision finally let me get my hands on the fader and platter. Turns out, I was wrong. DJ Hero is harder than it looks. 

[Dark iPhone photo courtesy of MTV Multiplayer's Russ Frushtick.]

Before I even touched the controller, the very concept of the game was already incredibly familiar to me, as I'm sure it is to anyone who's played a rhythm game in the past 10 years. Three colored notes move down a vinyl note highway -- green, red, and blue. Buttons that correspond to these colors are on the controllers' "platter," probably better recognized by most as the turntable proper. You know, where people used to put their music before the invention of mp3 players.

As the notes approach the bottom of the screen, you're simply tasked to hit the proper button at the right time. The middle button (red) triggers samples; the green and the blue buttons represent the two mixed tracks. (Each of DJ Hero's 94 songs are original mixes of two popular tracks.) Scratch sections appear on the green and blue tracks as well; you simply hold the button, and move the platter back and forth.

Keeping an eye on the highway, you'll see "lanes" that the green and blue tracks follow. This is where it gets slightly more complicated. As the the green lane moves out to the left, you'll move the controller's fader to the left to nail that section. As the green lane moves out to the right, you'll move the fader out to the right.

Got it? Good. It sounds complicated when explained, but seeing someone play in person -- at least someone who knows what they're doing, like FreeStyleGames' Jamie Jackson -- it makes quite a bit more sense. 

I had seen demos of the game numerous times, and was sure I wouldn't have a problem getting into a song. So I stepped up to controller in front of a small crowd of journalists and Activision employees, and I gave it my best shot. 

When Jackson asked me if I had ever played before, I told him I hadn't, but had seen it being played enough times that I felt like an old pro. I selected a mix I had heard before -- Black Eyed Peas' "Boom Boom Pow" vs. Benni Benassi's "Satisfaction" -- and Jackson suggested I start on the easy level. I laughed at such a ridiculous idea.

"Isn't that, uh, a little easy?"

After giving me a funny look, he conceded that it might be a bit simple, and let me select "Medium." A few things to understand -- I have a pretty good sense of rhythm, as well as a pretty lengthy (yet self-taught) musical background. So being able to hit the notes at the right time along with the music wasn't an issue. The fader wasn't much of a problem either, even though operating it with one hand while tapping buttons with the other is a bit like patting your head and rubbing your stomach at the same time.

So I was doing okay. Jackson watched over me as I played, encouraging me as he nodded his head to the beat.

"You're doing good. Nice. Perfect. Great," he said.

But unlike when Jackson plays -- he rocks back and forth, sometimes throwing his hand up in the air -- I was stiff. Lifeless. The level of concentration it was taking to push through this mix on Medium (what real gamer plays on Medium?) was astonishing. The feel of the turntable under my fingers was unlike anything I had experienced. Before picking up a plastic instrument to play Guitar Hero or pounding the drums in Rock Band, I had at least had experience with their real life instrument counterparts. 

Because that wasn't the case with a turntable, DJ Hero felt oddly foreign to me. Particularly the platter, I felt completely out of control when scratching the turntable, sometimes loosing my fingering or letting it spin too far. (You can move the platter a full 360 degrees.) The final results of my Black Eyed Peas/Benni Benassi mash-up were okay -- somewhere in the 80% range. Not bad for my first go. But not great, either. 

So I admit it -- while I thought that I'd easily be able to pick up DJ Hero and fly through songs on the more difficult levels, I was wrong. But I had enough fun trying, even on an easier difficult, that I'm willing to work at it when the game ships in October 27. I hope to look at cool as Jamie Jackson when I play by November.

---

Six mixes you didn't know were tracks in DJ Hero:

  • 50 Cent "Disco Inferno" vs. InDeep - "Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life"
  • Blondie - "Atomic" vs. Gorillaz "Feel Good Inc."
  • Jurassic 5 "Jayou" vs. billy Squier "Big Beat"
  • M.I.A. - "Paper Planes" vs. Wale "Lookin' At Me"
  • Tears for Fears - "Shout" vs. DJ Shadow feat. Mos Def "Six Day (Remix)"
  • Cypress Hill - "Insane in the Brain" vs. David McCallum "The Edge"

 

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22 comments | showing # 1 to 22
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Jaren Face's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:11
Jaren Face
Nice write up Nick. I too fell into the same camp of thinking the game looked a bit too easy. But after trying to replicate the controller set-up with my own mixer/Guitar Hero controller and ghosting some E3 footage, the whole thing seems like it would take a bit of getting use to.

I'm excited though, and those new mixes seem even more interesting. Hopefully they'll end up being some of the better ones.
Dreamsower's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:12
Dreamsower
DJ Shadow's Six Days and Blondie's Atomic yussss. I am pumped for this cause it's like Amplitude with an actual peripheral and more inputs to keep track of.
the Company's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:12
the Company
Hey! So someone finally explains the controller to me. That's wonderful.

I have to admit myself, I thought it looked strangely easy as well. But I knew it had something to do with the fact I had no idea how it was played.

It sounds like a lot of fun, though I'm not that excited for the track list. That, and I only have room for one rhythm game this fall (rather, my first in years). Sorry guys, it's not any of the ones with 'Hero' in the title. No offense.
atastysammich's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:12
atastysammich
I've gotta say, that's kinda encouraging! I am kinda looking forward to everybody starting off on equal footing with this new subgenre--I got left in the dust a while ago with the guitar games (the Guitar Hero people started making their own game?!).
a's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:13
a
Looks like Audiosurf
Br0th3rGr1mm's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:14
Br0th3rGr1mm
I once bought a helicopter sim game (Janes: Longbow) and soon realized I had no desire (or ability) to actually FLY a helicopter...I wanted to blow stuff up and have fun, not spend endless hours crashing into everything around me in a vain attempt to take-off / land / hover or just turn the darn thing.
YoTanaka's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:14
YoTanaka
Cypress Hill!! Sweet!
TheCleaningGuy's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:17
TheCleaningGuy
Glad to hear that it's good! The soundtrack looked amazing, but I was worried about the 3 buttons as well.
deaddays's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:34
deaddays
@Jaren
Wow, you actually went to the trouble of doing that? Either you're really pumped for the game or have too much time on your hands. :) Either way, I respect it.
Xzyliac's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:46
Xzyliac
God damn this game for looking so brilliant! If I end up buying two Hero games a year I will weep in surrender.
bobyoko's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:49
bobyoko
talk about video games being little more than toys, the hero and rock band series are kids toys guys. if you label yourself "hardcore" as a gamer, you should realize this as fact, and let this tired genre disappear. these games are the same shit repackaged every few months.
munkee's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:54
munkee
I really want to play this game. But, i REALLY dont want any more peripherals :\ hmmmm
djnealb's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 12:57
djnealb
I hope that this is a lesson to some of those who may feel that being a DJ is somehow easy. I'm just a lowly bedroom DJ who just beat mixes and throws in a few effects for fun, and thats hard enough as it is. That said, this game keeps looking better and better.
protomark's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 13:44
protomark
i dunno. for a little over the price of this game, you could go out and buy traktor and actually be an actual dj. how did pretending to be a musician suddenly become worth boatloads of money?
P3T3Y's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 13:52
P3T3Y
So it seems my actual experience with turntables may give me an edge on the learning curve for this game.
runtheplacered's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 14:20
runtheplacered
@ p3t3y,

Why would you want to play this game if you have turntables? Or a software mixing program like Traktor? What's the point?
falsoman's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 14:29
falsoman
@ runtheplacered : Because it's a game, maybe? Hell, i play guitar, piano and other instruments and i still have fun with GH and RB and many other rythm games.

Anyway, this game looks really fun, but as this year is already full of games that i want to play, i'll be buying the beatles game AND i'm not nearly done with the RB and GH that i already have... i think i'm gonna buy this one next year... hopefully cheaper than the launch price.
Johnny Justice's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 15:29
Johnny Justice
Black Eyed Peas' "Boom Boom Pow" vs. Benni Benassi's "Satisfaction"
I would have great difficulty in tolerating such tripe in itself.
Chuzzle's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 16:04
Chuzzle
@bobyoko

Just like every entry into ANY other gaming genre eh? FPS? same stuff, different package. RTS? same stuff, different package.. sports games? DEFINATELY same stuff...

How is this any different?
Rosseh's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 16:23
Rosseh
Hahahaha! It actually has a Brrrap setting. Please, another English person, tell me they find that hilarious.
Darren Nakamura's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 19:19
Darren Nakamura
I'm still waiting to see video of somebody playing this, showing how stuff on the screen corresponds to what you physically do. Your explanation helped out a bit more; now I sort of get what the blue and green lanes' switching from left to right means, but I don't even see where this switch is on the official images of the controller. And I still don't get why some videos show both tracks switching from left to right, and some videos show just one. Are there two switches, one for each track?
quik19's Avatar - Comment posted on 08/19/2009 19:43
quik19
@Dexter345

http://www.djhero.com/media - on the DJ Hero website they have tutorial videos posted which are very useful in figuring out how the game is played.

...and @Rosseh, I know you mean ;)
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