Music Monstars review

Too bad the sound quality is monstrous

GamesRadar+ Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Cute cartoon monsters

  • +

    Might amuse kids

  • +

    Can record your own tracks

Cons

  • -

    Appalling quality of tunes

  • -

    Markers can blur into a confusing mess

  • -

    Fake karaoke

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Arriving too late to cash in on grannies buying %26lsquo;that music game%26rsquo; for Christmas, Music MonStars is a rhythm-actioner where you play guitar, keyboards and drums. There%26rsquo;s a mildly spooky theme (with cartoony ghosts, vampires and what looks like a gimp), but what%26rsquo;s really frightening is the appalling quality of the tunes. Eighteen %26lsquo;tophits%26rsquo; have been put through a Craptone%26trade; synthesiser and then overlaid with Ouendan-ish markers, which are serviceable enough but can blur into a confusing mess on harder settings.

There%26rsquo;s an option to record your own multi-track compositions using the three instruments, but we found their artificial parping so painful it was hard to be tuneful. The box also boasts of a %26lsquo;Karaoke mode%26rsquo; %26ndash; which means you can read the lyrics on the top screen. Singing into the mic has no effect, apart from making you look a berk.

Mar 11, 2009

More info

GenreFamily
DescriptionThough you can record your own tracks, Music Monstars suffers from poor quality tunes that will only amuse children.
Platform"DS"
US censor rating""
UK censor rating"3+"
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
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