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EA's New Release!

The New Fifa Street is already out.

Assassin's Creed III Trailer

Check out the new trailer of the recently announced Assassin's Creed III.

Dear Esther Review

We review a game that is creating quite a lot of fuss right now in the market.

Chili Chalenge!

The Cinamon Chalenge is history, check out the Chili Challenge.

Dungeon Defenders

We review the widely known frantic co-op tower-defense game.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Squier by Fender strat review

This is how the combo looks like, but with a crappier amp and tuner...
 This is my fist review EVER, so take it into consideration. A have never written this publicly before, so don't get too critical on me. I must also say that english is NOT my first language. I am in the process of getting proficiency but I do not live or have not lived in an english talking country, so cut me some friggin' slack. So, as I said, I'll review my first guitar, which, as the title states, is a Squier by Fender Stratocaster. Now, there is a problem with what the box says on the outside, but I'll come back to that later; now let's talk about the specs. The guitar incorporates a body made of alder wood, and the neck of maple wood. It contains 21 frets in total, and the body includes three single-coil pickups. There are three controls on the body: one for volume and two for tone with a five-position pickup switching. The bridge is a synchronous tremolo and the machine heads are the standard Die-Cast Tuners. At the back you can see a chrome-built hardware with all the insides of the guitar and what not. Normally the pickguard is white, but mine has a red and black finish.

 Now you know how the guitar looks like, but here comes the serious business. As I said before, there is a problem with the box, and that's because it has quite a misleading slogan on it. It says: "Stop dreaming! Start playing!" Yeah, you get the point, the guitar's for starters. But that's not the problem. Once I unboxed the guitar, I frantically tried to play the intro of Nothing Else Matters, and the guitar sounded terribly untuned and shaky, which became a problem, since it was late at night and I wanted to play now. How are you going to start playing right away with an untuned guitar? It isn't major or horrible, it's just annoying at the beginning. Anyway, I tried to tune the guitar with the tuner that came with it, and after several futile attempts at doing so,
 I plugged the guitar to the Mac using Garageband and tuned it with the built-in tuner. I tried the song for a third time and it actually was in tune! The problem of the previous tuner was that it detected only the pitch of the string's vibrations, instead of using a built-in microphone to detect the pitch of the tone.


 Once tuned, I plugged it to my amplifier which came with my guitar as well; and the guitar sounded astonishingly well. I began trying all of the five switches and each one had its unique tone and vibration. I loved the high pitched vibration the strings transmitted, but I began to comprehend what this guitar was for, once I used Garageband to try and play it with heavy amounts of distortion. The guitar comes with three single-coil pickups, and that's because it is principally made for playing blues and country. I love country and blues, but when I used high levels of distortion the guitar sounded dirty and unfiltered. Once I began trying out and improvising blues and country songs, the guitar sounded beautiful and clean. However, when exposed to high drive levels, the guitar shows its rough and dervish side, as if showing who the boss is.



 So we talked about the tuning problem, how it looks, how it sounds... Now let's look at what it comes with. The combo is incredibly complete: it contained the guitar (obviously), three picks, a mono-aural cable, the SP-10 Squire amplifier, a whammy bar, a guitar case, a tuner (which is useless) and a strap. I read on some articles that the 80s squire strat, when whammed, gets untuned. Don't worry, this problem does no longer exist. The whammy bar works fine without untuning it the slightest. However, there is quite a problem with the bar. When I pull to trigger a whammy effect, it makes a really annoying squeaky sound, as if rusty valves opened and closed. Also, the bar unscrews constantly making it fall down.


The verdict: If you love the pure sound of an electric guitar, and want to start easy, it's a keeper. You should strongly consider getting this guitar if you're not going to play any modern music or going to use whammy. If you want to play metal, hard rock or something similar, you better get a guitar made for that genre only. If you are a country, blues and classic rock lover, you will feel ok with this guitar. If you aren't fan of either, try it, and decide whether to buy it or not, depending on your opinion.


2.5 out of 5 stars

Meet the Staff: Pablo (Pabman or Pabsensi)

 If you happen to be here by coincidence, and you like guitars, rock/metal music, videogames, and books, you are just in the right place. If not, you can just get the fuck out of here. I am a review maniac, and happen to be in possession of so many things related to music, games and literature, that I am willing to use some of my time to write reviews of which you will spend some of YOUR precious time reading (hopefully). However, since reviews are always based on a person's opinion, I'm going to let you know what kind of person I am.

 I'm going to be sincere. I'm a 15 year old boy, with too much things in his head and no other way to transmit them other than by blogging somewhere no one will stumble upon; because come on, who would visit this anyway? This is just any ordinary blog done by some loser somewhere around the world and you're a person with too little time to spare and too many important things to do. So why bother reading this? You might as well be one of those fools that will only read something if it's read or recommended by everyone else. Well then, fuck off. I mean it. One thing I've learned in my short life is that you being yourself is all about doing things only by yourself, and not giving a fuck whether everyone is doing it or not.

 Crap, I've driven off. Ok, where was I... Oh, yeah. So, I'm 15 years old, I like rock music, country, metal, indie.... practically anything that has lyrical consistence and that can make me bang my head or nod. I like shooters, RPG's, strategy games, and practically any game that is playable and fun. However, I am more into role-playing games for no apparent reason. Perhaps the hundreds of sidequests? The development of the character? Perhaps all of those things combined; but get me right, I am not a gaming whore. I do not throw the keyboard at the screen because my game didn't save for the last minute. I normally like games with more depth and intensity or realism to them, such as ArmA 2, Ghost Recon, Mass Effect 2, Dawn of War 2, Amnesia, Diablo 2... And another thing I love as well are games that are gorey or just give you an instant "orgasm" when you kill something, like in Sacred 2, Left 4 Dead 2, Killing Floor, Crysis, Fear... Don't get me wrong, I am not a sadic who likes getting hit with a whip. However, I love sense of completion when you kill an enemy you've been cursing on for a couple of lost battles.

 There's one last thing I must say. I've got a Mac. That means my gaming possibilities are extremely restricted, and I am required to play games on medium settings even if I'm lucky. If I'm not, most of them will have to be played at lowest, or will simply crash, as it occurs with Sacred 2, Mafia 2, and probably any game that needs a minimum of video consistence. That's it for today; my first post will be a review of my very first guitar, which has been with me for a whole year and never let me down, except for some tiny problems I'll discuss with further detail.

Oh, and below's a photo of me, in the streets of Camden Town.