![]() ![]() However it's also pretty boring at this point. It's simple, it works everyone can pick it up immediately. The idea is to sing along as best you can the game measures pitch, tone and timing rather than your ability to hit the exact notes (or even sing the right words), and scores you (and your opponent, should you be 'battling') accordingly. Christ on a micįirst of all a short reminder of the way SingStar works for the three or four abstentions lurking sulkily towards the back: you pick a song, it starts to play (usually with a video or some sort of EyeToy-driven visualisation in the background), the words appear along the bottom of the screen, and a series of bars specked with blue or red blobs represent your singing. If you don't play it, or continue to evade it, you're only delaying the inevitable. How it's not only designed to make you sing, but how it's made singing into a viable competition, and how many things there are to make you laugh - through playback, voice filters, EyeToy video-capture, and through the exposure of unlikely falsetto voices in once-reticent couch-dwellers. How it's the best and most universally appealing party game since Twister. Obi-Wan never told them just how much fun you can have with it. ![]() "Why doesn't this pitiful offspring of mine understand the power of the dark side? If only he knew, he wouldn't question it." Too many people are reluctant to play SingStar because they think it's karaoke, which they assume they don't like. Sometimes we just feel like poor old Darth Vader. ![]()
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