Eventually we set up a rug just so that we could play drums properly at his house.
#5 The Kangaroo Pedal I didn't have the problem at my house with a moving bass pedal because the rug that I sit my kit on sticks with the Velcro very well, but at my friend's house the pedal was in a new location after every track. When I lifted the pedal off the floor, the Velcro didn't co-operate! The Velcro had ripped right off the bottom of the pedal, and after just sticking it back on a couple of times I wound up using super glue to fix the problem. It works fine now looks ugly though! #4 Velcro Independence After an extended gaming session I proceeded to pack up my drum kit. My only option was to solder new wire on it myself. I couldn't send my kit off at the time because I needed it for New Year's Eve, which was in-between two other important parties. #3 Unwired For Sound On one drunken pre New Years Eve party some mistakes were made which led to the wire for orange being ripped apart. Again, another issue from a brand new kit. If I move them any higher than the lowest it makes too much of a rattling noise when you hit it. #2 Problem Getting It Up I don't lift the cymbal height at all. In the mean time I had to hit orange extremely hard, which ended up giving me muscle pains from playing for too long, as well as making gameplay unpleasant to listen to. The problem would not be fixed until my MIDI cable arrived in the mail. For the first time, I will give my negative experience with the drums of Guitar Hero: World Tour and now, I give you eight reasons to hate: #1 TOC - TOC - TOC - TOC - TOC Straight out of the box my orange cymbal was not sensitive enough. I'd been praising the Guitar Hero: World Tour drum kit since it's release, when this whole time my own kit has been riddled with problems most of which I have never disclosed, until now. I've made my opinion and experience of the World Tour kit known within forum posts, private messages and blog comments, but I cannot keep lying any longer. Drum kit supremacy is a varying opinion among Australian consumers, with their decisions being swayed by price, availability and hardware choices such as an extra drum, cymbals, drum size, and more minor discretions.