Key art for Fortnite Festival, showing a trio of Fortnite characters playing instruments alongside musical artist, The Weeknd.

What the hell Harmonix, you definitely could have done something better than Fortnite Festival

I never imagined that the first time I downloaded Fortnite on my PC would be to play a rhythm game created by the Rock Band folk, but here we are. As a huge rhythm game fiend, my Twitter timeline was saturated with clips from Fortnite Festival over the weekend, where Fry belts out Bad Romance or Piccolo goes absolutely ham on the drums to Mr. Brightside.

Somehow I was able to recover from the whiplash of witnessing Peter Griffin, Predator, Eminem and Invincible doing the griddy to Gangnam Style—well, I’m still haunted by it, but I got over it enough to actually wanna go and peep the mode for myself. I’ve written about my love for rhythm games a fair amount at this point, from arcade mainstays like Dance Dance Revolution and Maimai to more PC-centric endeavours like Muse Dash and DJMAX. It’d be criminal of me to not check Fortnite Festival out.

Like I said, it turns out this mode is a Harmonix special. That’s the folk behind the original Guitar Hero, who eventually went on to make Rock Band and, uh, Dance Central for the Kinect. It’s also the developer of Fuser, a game I thoroughly enjoyed but one that unfortunately struggled to find its feet and was ultimately delisted two years after release.

Something I’d totally forgotten about was the fact that Epic actually scoped up Harmonix two years ago, where the studio said it would “once again challenge expectations as we bring our unique brand of musical gaming experiences to the metaverse.”

We’re finally getting to see that manifest via this new mode, which leans heavily on the Rock Band formula. There are four difficulties: easy, medium and hard difficulty have four note lanes (think the green, red, yellow and blue buttons on a guitar controller) while expert difficulty adds an extra lane (that dreaded orange button). There are different instruments to pick too, with each song having charts for bass, lead guitar, vocals and drums.

Behind the Rock Band-like rhythm game track, a goatman acts as front man in Fortnite Festival.

(Image credit: Epic)

If it all feels kinda familiar, it kind of is! It looks like some charts—like Seven Nation Army—that made an appearance in Rock Band were ported over and tweaked slightly to suit non-instrument controllers and keyboards. It makes total sense to reuse them and besides, there’s only so much creative liberty you can take with charting each instrument’s distinct rhythm.

A lot of Fortnite Festival’s charts aren’t particularly challenging, especially on keyboard.

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