
iso to the field ISO:, and drag the actual folder called "temp" to the field Working Folder: and select Wii GH3 or Wii GH Aerosmith depending on which version. We need to add the correct files to the blank fields. Take your Guitar Hero 3.iso or Guitar Hero Aerosmith.iso and drop it in The Ghost's folder called "discs." Then, open up TheGHOSTWiiIsoTool.exe.

“Guitar Hero III” did the same, focusing on three-song bundles of new music and music featured in previous versions of the game.Okay, at this point, we can start modifying the actual Guitar Hero 3.iso file. Since then, “Rock Band” has made new music available every week as either singles or in three-pack bundles that can be added as new playable levels for between 99 cents and $5.50. The original “Rock Band” and “Guitar Hero” games shipped with more than 50 licensed songs each, a mix of master recordings and covers. The notion to pay 99 cents or $1.99 to have a song and repeatedly play with it apparently isn’t a big hurdle.” “We live in a rough time around music where our audience struggles to pay $20 for a CD but don’t hesitate to pay $50 for a game. “With such a low installation base, we didn’t think that there’d be 2 million songs sold in eight weeks,” MTVN Music Group/Logo/Films division president Van Toffler said. While new digital music services competing with iTunes and free peer-to-peer services have struggled to convince music fans to pay $1 for a single, downloadable tracks for games like “Rock Band” and “Guitar Hero” are flying off the digital shelves. REUTERS/Lucas JacksonĪctivision, meanwhile, said it has sold more than 5 million new songs via download for “Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock” since it began adding downloadable content in early November.īy comparison, it took wireless operator Sprint four months to sell 1 million songs on its over-the-air full-song download service. While new digital music services competing with iTunes and free peer-to-peer services have struggled to convince music fans to pay $1 for a single, downloadable tracks for games like "Rock Band" and "Guitar Hero" are flying off the digital shelves.

Gamers test the new game "Guitar Hero III" during the DigitalLife consumer electronics show in New York September 27, 2007.
