
Chris West writes: "Gone are the days of music/rhythm games which use fake, plastic instruments, and in with games that allows people to play with real instruments. Thanks to the revolutionary Rocksmith series, the music genre has not only been given life once again, but has also evolved. By setting the example on how it’s done, it was only a matter of time before another developer would take a stab at this gameplay style, but alas, Bandfuse‘s inefficient and somewhat lazy design keeps it from being a worthy competitor to Rocksmith."

This month’s feature looks back at that other game that teaches guitar.

It seems all too familiar. A promising new music game falls victim to the perils of being niche and under-performing in the hostile retail world.
Lately BandFuse had been pretty quiet on the social media front. They hadn’t updated their Facebook since February 28th and their twitter activity was close to non-existent. Suspicions of bad news were confirmed on March 13th via their Facebook Page
GamerFitNation’s Antwand Pearman reviews Bandfuse: Rock Legends for the PlayStation 3.