![]() ![]() Like I said, Yuzo Koshiro is a musician ahead of his time. Yuzo Koshiro is definitely a man ahead of his time with beats like these that he still plays in clubs nowadays.ĭay 17: Music You Never Get Tired Of Streets of Rage ~ “Keep The Groovin'” by Yuzo Koshiro But you cannot go wrong with the classics that paved the way. I wasn’t expecting much from a mid-boss, but I’m glad Chizuru Kagura’s fight theme proved me wrong. The KOF 2003 arrangement is an honorable mention that fight is way tougher in comparison.ĭay 16: 16-bit Music Streets of Rage 2 ~ “Dreamer” by Yuzo Koshiro When I think “cool boss theme”, this pulse-pounding rockin’ anthem comes to mind it gets better after its sweet acoustic intro. What a world of difference an arrangement can make. The fact that almost all the bosses here are disillusioned military bots instead of infected Reploids sets the sombre-yet-ass-kicking mood of part 4’s entire score, kicked off with aplomb here.ĭay 3: Opening Level Music Journey To Silius ~ “Stage 1” by Naoki Kodaka Like as if the more he fights his everlasting battle for peace, more innocent Reploids get caught in the crossfire. Mega Man X’s “Opening ~ Highway” is a landmark tune, but there’s a sense of sadness in part 4’s opening when you play as X. Even if half of that business involves block-pushing and wall-phasing.ĭay 2: Opening Level Music Mega Man X4 ~ “Opening Stage X” by Toshihiko Horiyama With sound bites from Blood Omen echoing amidst the chimes and hard percussions that start getting heavier past the 1:02 mark, it’s clear as day that main anti-hero Raziel means business. And I feel that this main theme to the third in the series ( Blood Omen and Soul Reaver were the first two) sets the stage for the twists and turns that follow. Any game featuring vampires, theatrics, time-travelling, and soul-traversing needs a haunting and chilling soundtrack to accompany it. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |