Fifth Guitar Hero with a highly diverse music selection spanning several decades and genres. Band Hero mode allows play with vocals and varied instruments. One of the franchise's most eclectic compilations, appreciated for its diversity.
Your verdict
Category
Rhythm4 players12+
Co-op
Description
Neversoft's fifth mainline entry, released in 2009 and focused on virtual band performance and on-the-fly configuration. Over eighty multi-instrument tracks, an instant Party Play mode and a shared Star Power system across band members. The commercial peak of the rock-band formula.
Guitar Hero 5 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
An anthem to the guitar gods, the game rolls out a deluge of rock and metal classics to strum on the famous plastic guitar. From legendary riffs to frenzied solos, every track galvanises the urge to play louder, faster. This infectious electric energy turned shredding into a living-room phenomenon.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Built for the party, this entry lets you join or leave the band at any time and freely mix instruments: conviviality comes first. Chaining hits as a band, amid laughter and energy, delivers an immediate, unifying pleasure. Flexible, generous and furiously festive, a rhythm game ideal for livening up any evening.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Chaining the colored notes tumbling down the neck while strumming right on the beat delivers the exhilarating illusion of holding a real solo, and the urge to replay a song to master it never fades. Stars, score and new titles keep refreshing the setlist. The repetition of the patterns and the plastic guitar show their limits, but this onstage thrill stays furiously infectious.
A milestone of the plastic-guitar music game, which turned the living room into a rock stage and launched a global cultural phenomenon around mastering songs on the instrument controller. Still very widespread in the West, its interest lies in this pioneer status of a genre turned commonplace rather than scarcity. A prime piece for music-game fans of the PS2 era.
Better with friends
A full four-player concert where guitar, bass, drums and vocals are split to rebuild a real band on stage. Cooperation is the heart of it: holding the tempo together, saving a struggling bandmate and nailing the run into the chorus bring a rare collective euphoria. Enjoying it all demands the dedicated instruments, but the chemistry of a well-drilled band turns every track into a shared triumph.