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Alfred Siew
Sat, Feb 09, 2008
The Straits Times
Want to play like The Rolling Stones? It'll cost you

THE game is ready, but the guitar is not.

For probably the first time, video gamers have not been able to lay hands on a hit game because the factories making the musical instruments that come with it are not churning them out fast enough.

Rock Band, which lets gamers hook up digital drums and guitars to their game consoles and 'play' along to hits from The Rolling Stones and other bands, has sold 1.5 million copies since its launch in the United States late last year.

The game is so hotly sought after that there is now a global shortage of the musical instruments bundled with the software discs.

And Singapore, a small market, does not have a shipment allocated to it yet.

Gamers here who cannot wait can turn to parallel imports brought in by retailers, but these cost up to $500. In the US, the game is going for about US$160 (S$227).

The Singapore office for Electronic Arts (EA), the game's distributor, now says it does not have a firm release date here, although it told retailers earlier that the game would hit the shelves next month.

EA spokesman Diana Tan told The Straits Times that other countries have problems getting the game as well, because the demand has been 'overwhelming'.

She said: 'Replicating the software can be done fast, but the equipment takes time to produce.'

EA may bring in a version of the game without the musical instruments. But it would mean that gamers will have to buy the drums and guitars separately, when they become available.

Rock Band rides on a new wave of games that demand their players do more than just sit inert, pressing buttons on a hand-held controller.

Last year's hot game, Guitar Hero III, for example, lets players play songs with a guitar-shaped controller, taking cues from on-screen prompts.

Another actively-interactive game is Nintendo's Wii Fit, which debuted in Japan two months ago and will likely be here this year. This one comes with an exercise pad that lets its players do push-ups instead of just shoot up enemies.

Mr Woo Liah Meng, who runs game retailer TecDrome at Sim Lim Square, said many gamers were disappointed by the delay in the delivery of Rock Band, following the success of Guitar Hero.

Mr Luo Wei Long, a 32-year-old manager, said of Rock Band: 'If you add more instruments, you can even get four players jamming at the same time.

'It's the best game in a while and we really should have got it earlier.'

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