is the third spinoff title of the Guitar Hero video game series. The game focuses on the band Metallica, the second title in the series to focus on a specific band after the series' previous . The full setlist for the game for all platforms contains 49 songs, 28 from the band, and 21 others from bands that are "their personal favorites and influences from over the years".[1] The PlayStation 2 and Wii versions of the game include three tracks from Death Magnetic, which was otherwise available as downloadable content for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 users. The whole Death Magnetic album was later released on Wii as Guitar Hero 5 downloadable content in November 2009.
Guitar Hero: Metallica features a "full band" mode similar to Guitar Hero World Tour that allows for up to four players to play lead guitar, bass guitar, drums, and vocals.[1] Players can play alone or with others both locally and online in competitive and cooperative game modes. In any mode, players attempt to match notes on instrument controllers as indicated by scrolling notes on-screen in order to score points and prevent the song from ending in failure. To match notes, lead and bass guitar players hold down fret buttons while strumming on the controller, drum players strike the matching drum pads on the drum controller, and vocalists attempt to match pitch with the song. Songs can be played in a Career mode in both single player and band modes to work through the song list below, or players may play any song using the game's Quickplay feature.
The setlist has been well received by critics, stating that the setlist reads like "the quintessential 'Best Of' track list for the band".[2] Matt Helgeson of Game Informer reviewed the soundtrack as "the best hit to miss ratio of any music game to date".[3]
The recordings from Death Magnetic used in Guitar Hero: Metallica are notable for being far less compressed than the CD versions.
The following list is the complete setlist of songs featured in the game, including the year of release of the song according to the game, the song name, the artist, and the song's placement in the band Career mode. All songs are based on master recordings, in two cases, specifically re-recorded for the game. In the game's Career mode, songs are presented sequentially in tiers representing both real and fictional venues. To access each subsequent tier, the players must accumulate a number of stars from available songs; completing a song rewards the players with up to five stars based on their overall performance. Tiers are arranged in approximate difficulty, which varies between the single player instrument careers and the band career modes, with later tiers representing more difficult songs.[2] Thirty-nine of the songs are exportable into Guitar Hero 5, Band Hero and for a small fee.[4]
Year | Song title | Artist | Band Career Tier/Venue | Exportable | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | "Ace of Spades" | ||||
1994 | "Albatross" | ||||
2008 | "All Nightmare Long" | ||||
1982 | "Am I Evil?" | ||||
1980 | "Armed and Ready" | ||||
1986 | "Battery" | ||||
2007 | "Beautiful Mourning" | ||||
2008 | |||||
2004 | "Blood and Thunder" | ||||
1976 | |||||
2008 | "Broken, Beat & Scarred" | ||||
1984 | "Creeping Death" | ||||
2008 | "Cyanide" | ||||
1994 | "Demon Cleaner" | ||||
1986 | "Disposable Heroes" | ||||
1988 | "Dyers Eve" | ||||
1991 | "Enter Sandman" | ||||
2008 | "Evil" | ||||
1984 | "Fade to Black" | ||||
1984 | "Fight Fire With Fire" | ||||
1984 | "For Whom the Bell Tolls" | ||||
2003 | "Frantic" | ||||
1997 | "Fuel" | ||||
1978 | "Hell Bent for Leather" | ||||
1983 | "Hit the Lights" | ||||
1996 | "King Nothing" | ||||
1986 | "Master of Puppets" | ||||
1997 | |||||
1998 | "Mercyful Fate" | ||||
1998 | "Mommy's Little Monster" (Live) | ||||
1986 | "Mother of Mercy" | ||||
2008 | "My Apocalypse" | ||||
1994 | "No Excuses" | ||||
1999 | "No Leaf Clover" | ||||
1991 | "Nothing Else Matters" | ||||
1988 | "One" | ||||
1986 | "Orion" | ||||
1991 | "Sad but True" | ||||
1983 | "Seek & Destroy" | ||||
1988 | |||||
1999 | "Stacked Actors" | ||||
1974 | "Stone Cold Crazy" | ||||
1986 | |||||
2001 | "Toxicity" | ||||
1973 | "Tuesday's Gone" | ||||
1976 | "Turn the Page" (Live) | ||||
1991 | |||||
1990 | "War Ensemble" | ||||
1990 | "War Inside My Head" | ||||
1986 | "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)" | ||||
1991 | "Wherever I May Roam" | ||||
1983 | "Whiplash" |
These songs are exclusive to PlayStation 2 and Wii game disks. Available as downloadable content on Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3
These songs are included on the game's demo on the Xbox 360
These songs were re-recorded by the original artist for use in the game[5] [6]
Not available as part of the Guitar Hero: Metallica export package but is available as downloadable content for the Guitar Hero series (compatible with Guitar Hero III, Guitar Hero World Tour, Guitar Hero 5, Band Hero and Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock)
Song does not contain Vocal section
Song contains both a single and double bass drums chart
Although no new downloadable content was released for the game, PlayStation 3 or Xbox 360 players who purchased playable tracks from Metallica's Death Magnetic album for Guitar Hero World Tour and through either the PlayStation Store or Xbox Live Marketplace had these tracks incorporated into , with the exclusion of "All Nightmare Long" which can be played after completing 5 of the 9 tiers.[7] These tracks become available in Career mode after completing the credits stage, "The Ice Cave." These songs are played in "The Stone Nightclub" venue. The game supports new song creation and sharing through the "GHTunes" music service (for PlayStation 3, Wii and Xbox 360 only) common to both World Tour and Metallica.[8]