DJ Hero primarily simulates turntablism, a musical style used by disc jockeys to create a new mashup song by incorporating one or more previously recorded songs played on record players along with sound effect generators. The game features score attack gameplay similar to the Guitar Hero games. The controller consists of a wireless deck consisting of a movable turntable that supports 3 “stream” buttons, an effects dial, a crossfader, and a “Euphoria” button; a hidden panel contains additional controller buttons to interact with the gaming console outside of the game. A portion of the controller can be detached and reattached to adapt the unit for left-handed players. Notes travel in an arc across a spinning record on screen, and the player holds down one of the 3 stream buttons to play notes; two buttons reflect the two songs used in that particular mix, and the third represents samples to add to the mix which can be adjusted with the effects dial. The player must also constantly adjust the crossfader to match onscreen symbols, which alters the relative volume of the songs as to bring one song to the forefront of the mix for a short time. Certain tracks are shown on screen as a series of up or down arrow, representing scratching sections, requiring the player to turn the turntable in the direction of the arrows while holding down the button to score points, mimicking the scratching of the record needle on vinyl albums. “Euphoria” is equivalent to Guitar Hero’s Star Power, collected by successfully completing specific phrases in the song mix, called Perfect Regions, and can be released by pressing the Euphoria button, doubling the player’s current multiplier as well as automatic crossfading when active. There is also a “Rewind” meter that builds through consistent successful playing, and once full, allows the player to rewind the song to fix errors in their performance. The player must continue to perform well or their performance meter will drop and the music track will cut out. Failing the song is not possible, unlike in Guitar Hero games.
A single player career mode is available, as well both competitive and cooperative multiplayer modes (“DJ vs DJ”), playable locally or remotely. Ten songs have been specially mixed to also support gameplay with Guitar Hero and other compatible guitar controllers in a “DJ vs Guitar” mode. Players can also use a microphone for a non-scoring addition to the mix. A Party Play mode allows the game to automatically play the songs with the ability for a player to jump in and play at any time.
Minimum System Requirements | Recommended System Requirements | |
CPU | AMD Athlon X2 2.8 GHz or higher; Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHz or higher | AMD Six-Core CPU; Intel Quad-Core CPU |
RAM | 4GB or more | 8GB |
OS | Windows Vista 32-Bit with Service Pack 2 and the KB971512 platform update | Windows 8 64-bit |
Graphics Card | AMD Radeon 3870 or higher; NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT or higher | AMD Radeon 7870 or higher; NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 or higher; Graphics Memory: 3GB |
HDD Space | 4GB | 4GB |
Game Analysis | DJ Hero is a music video game, developed by FreeStyleGames and published by Activision as a rhythm game spin-off of the Guitar Hero franchise.J Hero primarily simulates turntablism, a musical style used by disc jockeys to create a new mashup song by incorporating one or more previously recorded songs played on record players along with sound effect generators. The game features score attack gameplay similar to the Guitar Hero games. The controller consists of a wireless deck consisting of a movable turntable that supports 3 "stream" buttons, an effects dial, a crossfader, and a "Euphoria" button; a hidden panel contains additional controller buttons to interact with the gaming console outside of the game. | |
Optimization Score | 10 |
-Great setlist
-Great gameplay
-Loads of fun
-Not too much of a story
-Wishing there was a third. Next gen.
DJ Hero is a blast. I had so much fun, and still am having loads of fun, playing this game. It’s not what everyone thinks. Saying that it’s only rap songs. There are rap songs. But this game shows that’s not what being a DJ is. It really shows what being a DJ is. Blending two songs together for a really neat beat. And they are not all rap. They have Queen, Jackson 5, and other not rap songs.
Also this game had a great tutorial. Comparing to the Guitar Hero tutorial for any instrument. It was meh. But DJ Hero had a great tutor. Grandmaster Flash teaches you step by step how to play DJ Hero. DJ Hero is easy to learn but difficult to master. I only play on medium right now.
Which brings up some other stuff. You do not fail a song. At least I haven’t yet. The game has setlists of four songs to play continuously. After each song it shows your score and goes on without you having to press A to continue. And there is lots you have to do in the song. Pressing the buttons, scratches, the switch thing, then the optional but recommended dial turner (Much like the whammy bar in GH), and other things that don’t know how to explain in just words. And you can get a friend to play along with another turntable or as a guitarist. So your Guitar Hero buddy can play guitar while you DJ it up.
The story is not really a story. Just play setlists to unlock the next setlist. Which a game like this doesn’t need a story but it is neat to have a bit of a background story. They’ve done it before.
Conclusion: This game certainly worth a try. I am still having a blast playing. It isn’t what everyone thinks. It’s lots of fun. If you like electronic music even slightly. And even so the gameplay is fun on it’s own.