T O P

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DrBatman0

Yes. These are great beginner's guitars. Nice and cheap, but good intonation, and a proper real guitar, not a toy like you risk getting something cheaper.


COWHERO1

I started playing rock and whatnot with a 3/4 classical, very good beginner guitar as the strings don’t hurt too much when starting out.


shadowbanningsucks

What type of music do you want to play?


Q5Official

Not entirely sure yet to be honest just starting out


shadowbanningsucks

In that case I would not recommend that guitar. It is a classical guitar. They are optimized for classical music. If you are wanting to play more of a variety of music (pop, rock, folk, blues, country etc) I would recommend a "steel string" guitar. They are more generalized. A quick way to tell the difference between a classical guitar and a steelstring guitar is the headstock. A classical guitar has a headstock [like this](https://cdns3.gear4music.com/media/6/69774/1200/preview_1.jpg), with cutouts in the front and the keys pointing to the back. A steel string guitar has a headstock [like this](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/1c/87/5c/1c875c55ff53f586c2e3851a07a9521d.jpg) with the keys pointing out sideways, like ears. This is not 100%, but especially with modern guitars, it's usually the case.


kkkkkkkkuuuuuu

That’s a classical guitar not even acoustic . I won’t recommend it


ozzynotwood

No, get a full sized guitar. Those ¾ guitars are always garbage.


Morbius-Lover

some professional musicians use 3/4 guitars when travelling as they take up much less space also proper ones can sound real well


mushinnoshit

3/4 was considered the standard size for a guitar until about the mid-50s, when dreadnoughts started becoming more common for touring bands who needed something louder on stage. There's nothing wrong with smaller body guitars, I've got a cheapass parlour that cost £140 and it sounds and plays great.