
When Rock Band 3 was revealed at the end of the Green Day: Rock Band demo a few weeks ago, the teasing image of a piano/keyboard and three microphones for harmonies seemed to be the big improvements for the series following Rock Band 2. At E3 this past week, the people at MTV Games and Harmonix completely blew away those early impressions by showing that Rock Band will no longer be just a party game for mashing plastic controllers that imitate real instruments, it will finally act as a means to teach people how to play the real thing.

Harmonix, best known for their work on the Rock Band franchise, has announced that they're becoming a part of the Epic Games family.

Dave writes: "Hopefully time will be kind to Rock Band 3. It’s the equivalent of a Blade Runner or Van Gogh, unappreciated and undersold in its own time, but something that has undeniable quality. We may never see another Rock Band, no encore to this great series, but in Rock Band 3 and Rock Band 4, we got some pretty awesome final tracks."

Harmonix, the developer behind Rock Band and Dance Central, reveal some new gameplay footage for the upcoming DJ song-mixing game.
This might be the Rock Band iteration that finally makes me purchase the game. I just want to learn how to play guitar in a way that makes is enjoyable.