Unlike the first Rocksmith, you don’t have a tedious story mode you need to sift through in 2014 to make it to lessons and songs. What’s more, you can learn at your time and pace, repeat songs, and even make mistakes without the frustrated look on a teacher’s face. One thing is for certain, no matter which route you take, it is a lot cheaper taking on the Rocksmith lessons that it would be if you were to take lessons from a music teacher. There are two other versions, however, on the market - one that comes with the guitar cable and you supply the guitar, or if you can find it in your local store, a version that comes not only with the game and cable, but an Epiphone Les Paul Jr. If you already have the original Rocksmith you can use the cable you already own and save a pretty penny by buying the game only version. Rocksmith is a guitar teaching title, plain and simple, and it uses a real guitar instead of those imitation plastic ones you may have sitting in your closet from Rock Band or Guitar Hero. The edge as far as release time is concerned goes to Rocksmith 2014 and while the first game was clunky in menu and execution, the developers listened to the fans and have delivered a product that should satisfy most would-be guitarists no matter their skill level. You have Bandfuse that hits later this year, and the recently released Rocksmith 2014 Edition, which follows the original Rocksmith that hit two years ago. This year, as far as the teaching games are considered, you have two titles going head to head.
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Now that the music genre is virtually extinct and games like Rock Band and Guitar Hero have left the market, there are still two forms of the video game/music genre that still find itself kicking - dance games and guitar teaching games.