Mountains of Thunder certainly is great, I stopped on a mountain while flying around just to listen to it.Cowabungaa said:[HEADING=2]What?![/HEADING]
Two pages and no examples of WoW yet?!
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This needs to be fixed because it's one of the mind blowing soundtracks ever made. I often just stopped doing quests, got off my flying mount and just walked through certain zones just to soak up the atmosphere. And the soundtrack played a large role in that. I haven't played the game in ages but the music never left me.
Some examples of zones that did that to me:
I could keep linking stuff forever and ever and ever. But I won't, this will have to do. There's just too much.
Two honourable mentions that haven't been named yet had the same effect on me:
I could list quite a few other games though. Fable, UT99, World of Goo, plenty of games that have been mentioned already like Bastion, Red Dead Redemption and Deus Ex. It happens all the time with me.
I swear to the gods and spirits; I will get that game. Dajum.Daystar Clarion said:Journey
As soon as I finished playing it I thought to myself, 'Man, I need this soundtrack in my life.'
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That's an interesting distinction. In the film music world it's often said that the ideal soundtrack is the one the observer doesn't realise they're listening to. It's tempting to say that video games should be the same, but there's a big difference between them. A film composer can know precisely what is on screen at the moment each note sounds, and the director and composer can work together to reach that ideal. With games you always have some sense of player control over the gamestate, e.g. moving the camera with the mouse in Skyrim, so you can never be quite sure that the scene matches up exactly with the background music. There are ways to get closer to the ideal of course. Keeping with the Skyrim example you've got appropriate tracks that play when you enter combat, specific tracks for different enemy types (e.g. dragons), and more ambient tracks when the scene is calmer. But unless you can somehow have a score writing itself in real time based on some set of motiefs together with the gamestate (in the same way that the players view generates in real time based on their input and a set of models/textures) then you can never fully reach that film ideal.Fappy said:I think it says a lot about a game's music if it actually draws your focus away from the game and makes you notice how good the music is. I think most people would say a good game sountrack melds into the background and supports the atmosphere the game is trying to provide and I would agree. However I'd say it is more successful if it's one of the primary things you focus on/notice during the game.
I'm disappoint there's no Ace Combat Zero: Mission Zero music there.bl4ckh4wk64 said:Wow, three pages and no one has said Ace Combat 5 yet?
Anyway, some of the best soundtracks I've heard ever. After finishing the game, I immediately bought the whole OST.
When this song played, it probably the first time I ever cried in a video game too...
And then how could I forget about the piece de resistance.
And then there's the Mass Effect soundtrack. I bought all three after completing the games. I'm also way too lazy to look up the best ones on youtube because there's just way too many.
The track that plays in the first Mass Effect when you're inducted as a Spectre and then also plays again when you're giving your inspirational speech to the crew has always been in my good books.bl4ckh4wk64 said:And then there's the Mass Effect soundtrack. I bought all three after completing the games. I'm also way too lazy to look up the best ones on youtube because there's just way too many.
I didn't like Zero all that much. I liked the little cameo of Cpt. Bartlett, and that was about it.Mirroga said:I'm disappoint there's no Ace Combat Zero: Mission Zero music there.bl4ckh4wk64 said:Wow, three pages and no one has said Ace Combat 5 yet?
Anyway, some of the best soundtracks I've heard ever. After finishing the game, I immediately bought the whole OST.
When this song played, it probably the first time I ever cried in a video game too...
And then how could I forget about the piece de resistance.
And then there's the Mass Effect soundtrack. I bought all three after completing the games. I'm also way too lazy to look up the best ones on youtube because there's just way too many.
When I first heard that music I said to myself "Oh god THIS is the battle music? Well this is gonna suck..." and about 5 minutes later I pretty much had the song memorized and was singing along to it, probably my all time favorite battle themeThe Wykydtron said:Yup, it's gotta be done.
Singing along with the chorus all damn day.