


Lips will perform "vocal reduction" on your own songs, though they weren't showing the functionality off.DRM'd songs can't be used, regardless of the DRM scheme used.It works." We then crossed our arms and fell backwards into his waiting arms. When asked why they couldn't use one now, Yano responded, "Trust me.

Though they were only showing off the streaming functionality through a Zune, they assured us it would work just as simply through an iPod.Lips will be bundled with a black and a white controller.Yanno said that, despite the motion-sensitivity and the lights, the battery life is pretty impressive already, on prototype hardware. They use 2 AA batteries, just like the Xbox 360 controller.A second player can shake the microphone to instantly "jump in" to the song, no menus needed.We would love to do that." Alas, it's up to those third-party devs to implement support for this peripheral. When asked about Rock Band or Guitar Hero World Tour, Keiichi Yano told us, "That's a great idea. It's unclear if it will work with other music games.The wireless microphone will bind with the Xbox 360, no dongle required.We'll get around to writing up some of our impressions later, but first we wanted to share some answers to our biggest questions about the game. We got a chance to sit down with Keiichi Yano – chief creative officer of Lips developer iNiS – for a walkthrough of their upcoming Xbox 360 karaoke game.
