Jam Sessions 2

63 /100
20 octobre 2009

Jam Sessions 2, jeu de musique développé par Plato et édité par Ubisoft Entertainment, est paru le 20 octobre 2009 sur Nintendo DS. Suite de Jam Sessions, ce titre décline le concept de simulation de guitare avec un audio amélioré, une bibliothèque d'accords plus large, des effets sonores personnalisables et une variété accrue de chansons à apprendre et à jouer. L'agrégat des notes lui attribue un score de 63,00.

Gameplay de Jam Sessions 2

Sur le plan de l'accueil critique, Cheat Code Central a confié que « Gameplay elements are fun but we'd have liked to see beefier musical features. » De son côté, GameZone a relevé que « Jam Sessions 2 might not be the prettiest package on the shelves, but there’s no denying the appeal of a more authentic guitar simulation over the usual riffra… »

Médias

Avis des critiques et joueurs

Critiques de la Presse (Metacritic)

Cheat Code Central 78/100

« Gameplay elements are fun but we'd have liked to see beefier musical features. »

GameZone 74/100

« Jam Sessions 2 might not be the prettiest package on the shelves, but there’s no denying the appeal of a more authentic guitar simulation over the usual riffraff. Hopefully things will be tightened up for the next version, because right now, JS2 feels like two separate games – and not in a good way. »

IGN 70/100

« Jam Sessions is more a “game” than ever, and while it works, is fun, and a valid music option on DS, it’s going in a very different direction than the original would have gamers expecting. »

Game Chronicles 69/100

« I do recommend this title to any guitarist out there that wants to practice without lugging their guitar around, but for those seeking to just rock some licensed set lists, you know where to go. »

Gaming Age 67/100

« It has it's fair share of problems, sure, but I think if you're willing to put some time into you can come up with some interesting things from the title. »

Gamervision 50/100

« The Recording Studio is a terrific time waster, but doesn’t offer anything remarkably different from the first that would warrant an upgrade. Songbook is an aggravating mess that would have been made more tolerable if there were actual recordings instead of covers, but I’m not sure even that would have made that mode worth completing. »

NintendoWorldReport 50/100

« Jam Sessions 2 isn't a terrible game, but it seems to be a huge step in the wrong direction for the series. »

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