In the end, you'll get a final score and a ranking that ranges from "Tone Deaf" to "SingStar." Not too exciting, right? I mean, it's a solid system that works for the party atmosphere Sony's shooting for, but we've been doing all of that for the past five U.S./PS2 iterations of this game. When a line of text ends, you'll get a written critique ranging from "awful" to "cool" along with some points. When you're in the game, words will illuminate at the bottom and you'll try to fill in blank pitch and timing bars with your voice, which appears as whatever colored mic you're using. You'll pick your musical poison from one of the 30 songs/six medleys on the disc or whatever tracks you've downloaded - more on that in a bit - and get it on. You'll pick up the blue and red microphones (You can buy them packed in with the game, but if you have the PS2 mics, they're the same thing so just buy the disc by itself.) and decide if you want to sing alone, battle an in-house opponent, duet, or face off in an up to eight-person, pass the mic battle. SingStar marks the game's jump to the PlayStation 3. It might sound like a simple product, but 85 different discs from the franchise have been released worldwide on the PlayStation 2. You pop a disc in, choose a song, a music video plays, and you sing along. For the uninitiated in the group, the SingStar franchise acts as a karaoke simulator.
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