The Guitar Hero craze of the late 2000s feels like ancient history now, but at the time, thousands of gamers across the country would come home from school (or work), strap on a fake plastic guitar, and transform into living-room rock Gods. There was nothing quite like shredding through classic hits like "I Love Rock N' Roll" or "I Wanna Be Sedated" before turning around and making dinner. Guitar Hero brought us all the glamour of music superstardom without worries like artistic integrity, drug use, or Yoko Ono. But the guitar-game fad flamed out pretty quickly. Original Guitar Hero publisher RedOctane was bought by Activision in 2006, while the game's developer, Harmonix, was purchased by Viacom later that same year. While Activision continued to release new Guitar Hero installments, Harmonix produced the similar but more diverse Rock Band serꦑies, which expanded the playable-instruments gimmick to include bass, drums, and singing.
The addition of another guitar-based music game was too much, and in 2011, Viacom sold Harmonix yet again. Meanwhile, Activision canceled development of future Guitar Hero games, leaving gamers across the country with plastic guitars gathering dust in the corner. But never fear! The Guitar Hero controller has some hidden uses you may not have yet ♈considered.
15 🉐 🐟 Play Fighting Games
But even better than kicking digital demon butt is kicking your friends’ butts. Everyone knows that fighting games are great for multiplayer, but sometimes you just want to make serving up beatdowns look just a little cooler than mashing on buttons. Since the Guitar Hero peripheral is basically a fancy controller, you can remap the buttons and wail on your friends with it in a fighting game of your choice. Players have documented using the guitar controller for games like Soul Calibur III and Street Fighter, and the possibilities don't stop there. It takes a real master to play a reflex-based game like Street Fighter with a guitar, so prepare yourself to ✨train in the toughest virtual dojo. If you can do it, you’ll earn unlimited bragging rights for life.
14 Hack It For Commodore 64 ♛
Rock has a long history, one that extends far beyond the decade that Guitar Hero has been around. Maybe you’re a retro rock aficionado, and you have one of the Guitar Hero controllers modeled after an older guitar, like the Gibson Explorer-based version that came with Guitar Hero II, and you want the game experience itself to match. If you want to take that retro look into whatever you're playing, you can hack the controller and make it compatible with the Commodore 64, a retro console that was first introduced in 1982. That's before Nintendo even released the NES! Projects like are compatible with the Guitar Hero controller but take it back to a time before 3D graphics and ﷺstudio trickery were all the rage.
13 🌞 Control Robots
Though the Guitar Hero controller looks like a rock instrument of the highest order, its actual use has always been more down-to-earth, helping players interact with objects in games. Maybe you want to use it to control something more out-there. Modifying the guitar's original functionality as a controller, you can use it to pilot robots. That's what one robotics team in the southern US did. While it’s true that gaming controllers are commonly used in robotics competitions, Georgia's RoboLions went a step further and used a Guitar Hero peripheral at the Peachtree Regional 🍌Robotics competition in 2007. Their ingenuity won them the award for Innovation in Control. 🔜More like R.O.B. & roll, am I right?
12 Use It For Music Production 🎀 ﷽
Playing virtual music is all well and good, but sometimes you want to move beyond it and start creating your own tunes. You get a little taste of what it’s like to be a music star, and now you want the real thing. With a little bit of hacking, you can do just that, turning your guitar into an effective way to produce original music. One method is modding the guitar into a MIDI controller, which allows you to compose orig🌼inal tunes quickly and easily; another method, if you want something a little more full-featured, is to use it in the music production software Ableton Live, a popular program within the music industry. Soon you’ll be on your way to real musical fame. Just make sure to remember all the fans who got you there.
11 𒆙 ⭕ Play Rock Band
The Guitar Hero peripheral is marketed as only being for one rhythm game. Activision even has legal disclaimers on the back of the box stating that they discourage use with competing games – one imagines this is because they want you to buy one of their controllers, not because it would set fire to your console. Despite this warning, the latest edition of the newly revived Rock Band is perfectly compatible with the Guitar Hero guitar. All you have to do is plug the controller into the system and rock on. This isn’t so great for Activision, but it’s wonderful for players. After all, why buy a new guitar when the old one works just as well? Rhythm game fans have compiled massive spreadsheets detailing which guitars w𒆙ork with which games.
10 Play Dark Souls 💫
Sure, playing Rock Band is all well and good, but what if you want to move beyond the music world? Maybe you want to be the rocking-est knight that the gaming world has ever seen, to kick monster butt with the sheer power of rock n’ roll. Well, the Guitar Hero peripheral can play Dark Souls too! Players have filmed themselves beating both Dark Souls and series spinoff with nothing but a Guitar Hero peripheral and their wits.🔯 It’s not easy, and it limits your ability to move through the game world, but if you want a bit of extra challenge you can turn your guitar into a d𝐆emon-slaying weapon just by plugging it in. Turns out that fancy controller is just a bunch of buttons that inputs into a game world – who knew?
9 ꦿ Make It Play Itself ♕
Maybe you still want to play Guitar Hero, but you don’t want the difficult task of, well, actually playing Guitar Hero – maybe you’re stuck on a song, or your fingers are just tired. With a little bit of hacking and ingenuity, you don’t have to put in the work. That's what Eric Falk did with his Guitar Zero mod, which you can check out – with some🦹 modifications to the controller, he made it possible for the game to literally play itself. If only being a real rock star were as easy as watching from the comfort of your couch while your score spirals higher and the audience cheers. If nothing elseไ, just imagine all the trophies and achievements you’ll rack up for your gaming profile.
8 🦋 Connect It To Your PC ⭕
As cool as it is to play other games with the controller on your console, it’s still pretty pedestrian as far as we’re concerned. After all, the peripheral is made to work with the gaming console of your choice. But the non-Guitar Hero gaming uses of the controller don’t stop at console games. Why not go cross-platform and plug the controller into your PC? While the original Guitar Hero has yet to be ported to PC, the free, open-source rhythm game Frets on Fire is perfectly compatible with the Guitar Hero guitar, letting you shred on a whole new platform. All you need i൩s a working USB port or wireless receiver, and you can open up a whole new frontier of digital rock sup🌳erstardom.
7 Modify It
The regular Guitar Hero controller is, let’s face it, just a little boring now that the novelty of virtual shredding has worn off. All the funky, real guitar-inspired shapes in the world can't disguise the fact that it's basically a fancy shell for a few colored buttons and a strum bar. And besides, what if you want to make the controller really look and feel like yours and yours alone? With some mods, you can spruce it up and customize it, making it a real fantasy instrument. Changes range from subtle, like making the buttons more responsive, to more noticeable adjustments like light-up buttons or Hello Kitty-themed faceplates. With a little adjustment, your guitar can be a fully unique expression of your interests, different from any otꦑher 🤡guitars out there.
6 ᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚಞᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ Use It As An Android Controller
The mp3 player revolution changed how we listen to music, and if you take a real guitar with you on your travels, you can create music wherever you want too. But the regular Guitar Hero controller is stubbornly stuck at home. What if you want to take the music with you on the go? With a little bit of tweaking, you can adapt your Guitar Hero controller into a capable game device for your Android phone or tablet. All it takes is some coding knowledge and an alternate power source for the contr🤪oller. And since many Android devices natively support gaming controllers, the modifications aren't too com🌜plicated. Soon you'll be able to get your guitar on no matter where you are on your world tour.