Green Day: Rock Band coming June 8, supports full exports
<!--body--> Green Day: Rock Band has a release date, so you can finally exhale. The game is coming to the PlayStation, Xbox 360, and Nintendo Wii on June 8, for $59.99 on the two high-definition systems and $49.99 on the Nintendo Wii. The game features 47 Green Day songs, vocal harmonizing for multiple singers, and you'll have the ability to export every song to Rock Band or Rock Band 2 for an additional $10. Joystiq is reporting that if you preorder the game from GameStop, you'll be able to export the songs to your hard drive for free. A $69.99 special edition version of the game will include the ability to export the songs as well, and will include previously released Green Day tracks from the Rock Band Store. The story mode of the game will take you through Green Day's career, with images to unlock and videos to watch. For the hardcore Green Day fan this should be a day-one purchase. For everyone else? We're just going to have to take a look at how much Green Day we need in our rhythm games. Harmonix has also announced Rock Band 3 for release this year, but has yet to provide any details. Read the comments on this post
March 11, 2010, 9:57 am| Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Report: ACTA secrecy is all the United States' fault
<!--body--> The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) got a bit more transparent this year, as negotiators held a few meetings with... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Abducted Journalist Tweets from Captor’s Cellphone
A Japanese journalist held against his will in Afghanistan used a captor’s cellphone to tweet his status and location to... Read more | Read full article | More articles from mashable.com
-
Google TV Set for Fall Launch
The Apple TV refresh isn’t the only new connected device headed to living rooms this fall; Google CEO Eric Schmidt... Read more | Read full article | More articles from mashable.com
-
Etc: A Stanford Law professor has written a detailed analysis of the issues with the decision that has blocked the federal funding of stem cell research.
<!--body--> A Stanford Law professor has written a detailed analysis of the issues with the decision that has blocked the... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Etc: The new fourth-gen iPod touch has gained a vibrating motor for FaceTime and (presumably) other alerts.
<!--body--> The new fourth-gen iPod touch has gained a vibrating motor for FaceTime and (presumably) other alerts. Read More: Multi-touch... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Major file-sharing bust in Europe targets P2P admins
<!--body--> Sweden's Frederick Ingblad is a specialized intellectual property prosecutor, and this morning he made a very specialized announcement: at... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Etc: The Windows Phone 7 revolution is coming, according to an advertisement shown at a film event in the UK at the weekend.
<!--body--> The Windows Phone 7 revolution is coming, according to an advertisement shown at a film event in the UK... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Sony releases mandatory PS3 update in response to jailbreak
<!--body--> To the shock of absolutely no one, Sony has announced a new mandatory update for the PlayStation 3. Don't... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Etc: Informal testing running iOS 4.1 GM on an iPhone 3G shows the device is much more responsive compared to running iOS 4.0. iOS 4.1 should be officially released this week.
<!--body--> Informal testing running iOS 4.1 GM on an iPhone 3G shows the device is much more responsive compared to... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Samsung Galaxy S-variant Fascinate launches on Verizon this week
<!--body--> The Samsung Galaxy S is coming to Verizon's network this week in the form of the Samsung Fascinate. The... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com

