PoisonUnagi said:
They fit together quite nicely, each one on its own is awesome too.
This. Is. Awesome. Period.
If the game is half as good as the couple minute music clips they're giving us, I'm not leaving my computer for at least a gamer-day.*
Thoroughly enjoyed the ME2 music. Especially the end of the game when you're just running around destroying shit with your buffed up guns. Even in Insanity, I loved running through the suicide mission, popping enemies with my sniper, and the music only made it that much more badass.
Have to go with a classic. The game that got me in to computer gaming; Hell March from Red Alert. Not the version from RA2 (which, by all means, was a freaking epically awesome game itself), but the original.
To finish it off, the closing music to Homeworld, written and performed by the ever-awesome Yes. The rest of the soundtrack fit with the game perfectly, adding an excellent ambient feel to the space adventures of my mothership and her fleet of 167 Ion Cannon frigates (most of which were captured). I still laugh whenever I picture the Taiidan emperor's face as my mothership comes out of hyperspace, followed by a rather typical, small fleet of about 20 ion cannon frigates and the maximum number of other ships (at this point I picture him chuckling to himself about the seemingly puny size of my fleet), and then the resounding slap to the face when nearly two hundred of ships formerly belonging to him appear behind me (his face droops, jaw dropping nearly to the floor. He blinks once, twice, and slowly a stain spreads across his neatly ironed Imperial pantaloons as he realizes how royally screwed he actually is). Ah, now I have to go play through the game again...
Anyway, those are my top three/four.
----
*For those who aren't familiar with gamer-time, think of when you're playing a good game, and someone, say your mother, calls you up for dinner. You respond with "Just a second", and, six hours later, you suddenly realize you're kinda hungry. Your parents, however, have already gone to sleep and you're stuck making dinner for yourself. That six hour timespan is what we like to call a "gamer-second", although a gamer-second can last anywhere from three hours to a day and a half depending. Now, scale that up to a gamer-day.