In anticipation of this week's release of DJ Hero, and in response to questions about the viability of the music genre as a whole, Fortune posted an interview with Guitar
Hero CEO and president Dan Rosensweig today to press him on the future of the genre, and the competitive situation with Rock
Band. After deftly dodging nearly all of Fortune's more pressing questions about the prospects of the business, he did divulge
some details on the label's strategy for expansion beyond Guitar Hero 5.
DJ Hero is just one important step, as it introduces a new way of playing, a new kind of set-list, and a new intended-audience, but
possibly more important is the expansion into the broader family and female-focused markets. Band Hero is one of the first steps into this area, and that product is predominantly focused on bringing families together with "safer"
musical choices that bump the game's rating to an "Everyone 10+" (for "Mild Lyrics," and "Mild Suggestive Themes") versus
the "Teen" rating for Guitar Hero 5. Interestingly, despite the "family" focus, the ESRB has already noted that Band Hero includes scenes of "pole dancing" and "fantastical succubus with cleavage and panties." Many families' (and
female players too) primary complaint with Guitar Hero and Rock Band in the past has been the fact that some of the lyrics
can get a bit saucy. For moms and dads, the thought of gathering together with the kids to sing rousing anthems about sex
and drugs can be a little uncomfortable, and there's understandably an assumption that this won't be the case with a "family"
oriented edition of the franchise. According to the ESRB, this might not be the case however. The rating notes that the songs
included feature lines such as "I'm so horny," and "your sex is on fire." Perhaps not something a kids wants to hear their
dad singing either, we'd wager.
Regardless, Rosensweig did divulge some information about the current audience for Guitar Hero, stating that "A very large
group really wants great guitar music, and they don't want us to confuse that. And there's another group of people who love
that, but also love to have more current music, more family music, music more popular for girls -- 30 percent of our players
are already girls, and we want that to grow. One of the great things about having a franchise like this is you can really
meet all kinds of consumer demand."
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In anticipation of this week's release of DJ Hero, and in response to questions about the viability of the music genre as a whole, Fortune posted an interview with Guitar
Hero CEO and president Dan Rosensweig today to press him on the future of the genre, and the competitive situation with Rock
Band. After deftly dodging nearly all of Fortune's more pressing questions about the prospects of the business, he did divulge
some details on the label's strategy for expansion beyond Guitar Hero 5.
DJ Hero is just one important step, as it introduces a new way of playing, a new kind of set-list, and a new intended-audience, but
possibly more important is the expansion into the broader family and female-focused markets. Band Hero is one of the first steps into this area, and that product is predominantly focused on bringing families together with "safer"
musical choices that bump the game's rating to an "Everyone 10+" (for "Mild Lyrics," and "Mild Suggestive Themes") versus
the "Teen" rating for Guitar Hero 5. Interestingly, despite the "family" focus, the ESRB has already noted that Band Hero includes scenes of "pole dancing" and "fantastical succubus with cleavage and panties." Many families' (and
female players too) primary complaint with Guitar Hero and Rock Band in the past has been the fact that some of the lyrics
can get a bit saucy. For moms and dads, the thought of gathering together with the kids to sing rousing anthems about sex
and drugs can be a little uncomfortable, and there's understandably an assumption that this won't be the case with a "family"
oriented edition of the franchise. According to the ESRB, this might not be the case however. The rating notes that the songs
included feature lines such as "I'm so horny," and "your sex is on fire." Perhaps not something a kids wants to hear their
dad singing either, we'd wager.
Regardless, Rosensweig did divulge some information about the current audience for Guitar Hero, stating that "A very large
group really wants great guitar music, and they don't want us to confuse that. And there's another group of people who love
that, but also love to have more current music, more family music, music more popular for girls -- 30 percent of our players
are already girls, and we want that to grow. One of the great things about having a franchise like this is you can really
meet all kinds of consumer demand."
30 percent of Guitar Hero players are girls
The current set-list for Band Hero includes more of an emphasis on female artists including Taylor Swift, Janet Jackson, Joss
Stone, No Doubt, Spice Girls, Lily Allen and Hilary Duff.
For more gaming news, visit GamePro. Story copyright GamePro Media.