
As a single player experience DJ Hero is a great game, it provides a fun and addictive campaign with lots and lots of content. The turntable peripheral is a rather solid device, albeit with a few kinks to still work out, and genuinely makes the player feel like they're contributing to the music. The multiplayer experience is a bit underdeveloped, both competitively and cooperatively, but those who enjoy DJ culture and remix music will absolutely love the game.
As an expensive game to own it's hard to recommend it to everyone who wants to try it, the game's limitations make it less enjoyable than the first time you picked up Guitar Hero, but for those who have played and mastered the other music genre games DJ Hero is definitely worth checking out.

LLC: "I love games, that bit is probably obvious. But I’m getting on a bit, and was thinking about some the games that need to come back."

As the world reels from the shockwaves of the seismic news that Microsoft is acquiring the proverbial swamp of the video-game landscape, Activision Blizzard King, it only seems natural that our minds should now shift towards what the fallout will be for presumably years if not decades to come.
Another Prototype would be awesome.
As for Singularity, I don't necessarily need a sequel, I just want to see Raven be able to flex their creative muscle again; not just be relegated to assisting with CoD. A lot of the old guard is still with the company.
That's part of what I'm hoping to see come from this acquisition. Revive teams like Vicarious Visions and Ravem to actually allow them to work on their own new projects again.
I'd like to see Activision get the Transformers license again and continue the War and Fall of Cybertron games. the movie games were crap and the game that combined both movie and Fall and War of Cybertron sucked a new Prototype would also be good as well.
Re-imagining of River Raid and the original adventurer Pitfall. Oh Zork is also a great game.
Top 10 Wrestlers in Non-Wrestling Games by Level Down Games It’s no surprise to anyone who watches or listens to our podcasts that we love professional wrestling and video games. While there are countless wrestling video games such as WWF Steel Cage Challenge, The WWE 2K series and the bane of El Frankero’s existence, Tag …