what does this mean? you can always learn more songs. it's not just about learning technique.
i think of rocksmith as a catalyst for guitar learning.
when i firsted started out rocksmith, my experience with the guitar was limited; all i could do was read and play tabs really slowly. rocksmith introduced me to the fundamentals and how to do things "properly". the minigames were excellent in this. i also liked the jam session feature because it taught you scales and it made you sound like a guitar god.
after i played those minigames and learned like a few songs (highest difficulty i learned was prob just the beginning of satch boogie; songs i remember genuinely mastering was "r u mine" and "everlong" and these two oddly
niche songs), i kinda felt like i learned "enough" to convince people i can play guitar. i stopped playing because of a petty reason: i had rocksmith on the xbax, so i had to boot up my console, switch inputs, connect the cable to my guitar, wait 9999 hours for the logos to go away, and then i can finally play. often i find myself too damn lazy to launch the game, and i end up just youtubing the song on rocksmith and just playing along with that.
i still didn't know wtf chords were after i stopped playing rocksmith. unless you play the rhythm section in rocksmith which im pretty sure nobody does, all you learn is some solo lead stuff, which isn't bad; but it just sounds weak when you play it by yourself as opposed to with a band backing you. after rocksmith, i just migrated to ultimate-guitar and just read tabs; because really that's what the core of rocksmith is; it's just tabs in a gamified way. most of the CDLC don't even have difficulty options.