I've been drumming for 7 years. If anything can make my shin tired, it's not a fake drum pedal.
I've been drumming for 7 years. If anything can make my shin tired, it's not a fake drum pedal.
Well, how would you deal with a kick with a weak spring?
Most of us aren't drummers.....share that wisdom, cuz
They should have made the pedal resistance adjustable. Did they? If they didn't it wouldn't be that expensive of an idea for future releases.
I have an Iron Cobra double bass pedal sitting right here and the springs are adjustable on it.
I can comfortably bend my right thumb completely behind the knuckle of my right index finger. It looks grotesque.
Anyway, sorry I can't help with your questions; I don't have the game yet.
I used the pedal today and I have no drum experience but it didnt seem "super cheap" or anything. Registered fine and you can slide it on the bottom of the drum stand so its on the left or rightish side. I dont know if you can lock it down but it is on the stand so it doesnt move backwards or forward unless you pick it up (I assume). Other than that my shin was getting tired from playing lol, but you can rest your foot on it as it only registers when its full pressed.
I wish I could explain what it is like better.
P.S. Didnt seem resistance or height adjustable
Has anyone played a drumscape machine before? It's an arcade drum simulator made by MTV. It's strewn about in random places...kinda like health stations in Half-Life 2. I encountered two in my life, and both were at theme parks. So...if anyone's played on one of these before, is the bass pedal in any way comparable to this?
I remember the Drumscape pedal was kinda nice. Very authentic.
Oh, and back when I skateboarded, the cleanest most beautiful heelflip I ever landed was over a pile of horse dung.
Ironic. Perhaps the dung provided some incentive to land it correctly? That's my little known fact.