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Behind the Scenes #2

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Robert Seth

That's not true, you do have a soul and a good heart. It's not wrong to want the world to be beautiful like that song. It's a very lovely and enchanting song.

Anonymous

Music has a way of touching you in a way that nothing else can. Music can make you feel things that you rarely experience. I've cried to music in ways I wish I could with all deep moving songs. They've uplifted me and kept me company. They've made me feel wanted and cared about when nothing else has. I have a deep love for music that I find difficult to relate to many others and I will never understand how people don't feel the same way. Beauty and wonder comes in the ears more than nearly anything else for me. I swear music has saved my life before. I'm glad you found some of that beauty and lived in the moment of it. Emotion creates some of the best experiences you'll ever have. I hope you'll never stop appreciating music. Its such a e

Anonymous

I need to reply this game again and just take my time listening to the music

Anonymous

I love music in games. I have every World of Warcraft soundtrack I can find, including Taverns of Azeroth. What game is this, i would love to check out the soundtrack.

Skyfox (edited)

Comment edits

2021-10-10 20:28:41 Music is an incredibly powerful thing for touching the emotions and imagination. The notes, chords, melodies, and everything can create such amazing feelings and put such incredible imagery into the mind, all merely by being sound. Of course, the sounds also tap into our past experiences and associations we've had with similar music. A few games you've played have had that ability to impact my emotions similar to the way this one does to you. In the Snake Pass soundtrack, the first set of levels in the "earth" world includes a piece of music that moves me to tears of such happiness, with the association of not only a beautiful tropical place but also the association of the fun had by such a cute character as Noodle. It makes me long for a tranquil place like that in the tropical islands somewhere. And in Starbound--a game whose mere concept of traveling to the stars can get me choked up and misty-eyed--the music played in the outpost (which you saw me gush about many times) hit me even harder. After downloading the soundtrack, one day I sat there and listened to it with no game play, no game commentary, no distractions. It was just me and the music. Within seconds it made me break down sobbing, associating the music with traveling to the stars and meeting new civilizations as well as the harsh reality that I never will. I couldn't stop for 5 or 10 minutes, it impacted me so hard (plus it helped me release some depression I'd been suppressing for several days). And last year the phenomenal music from Ori & The Blind Forest also hit me hard in a deeply emotional way. Other games have had good music but haven't touched me in the same way at all. Among non-game music, listen to "Our Final Flight" by Fox Amoore. That piece makes me cry tears of happiness as I have the mental imagery of soaring up among the towering clouds, whether it's with a hang glider or wings on my back. Music can make us think of times, places, and experiences that are so incredibly beautiful, very often far more beautiful than anything we ever experience in life. I have to wonder if your newfound sobriety has had any effect on you in terms of appreciation for music and other arts. A few sobriety blogs back you mentioned your mental clarity allowing you to have so much more appreciation for life and the little experiences, so that got me wondering about the impact music has on you now compared to when you were drinking. (And speaking of a hang glider in the previous paragraph, when's the last time you've gone hang gliding?)
2017-09-23 02:36:25 Music is an incredibly powerful thing for touching the emotions and imagination. The notes, chords, melodies, and everything can create such amazing feelings and put such incredible imagery into the mind, all merely by being sound. Of course, the sounds also tap into our past experiences and associations we've had with similar music. A few games you've played have had that ability to impact my emotions similar to the way this one does to you. In the Snake Pass soundtrack, the first set of levels in the "earth" world includes a piece of music that moves me to tears of such happiness, with the association of not only a beautiful tropical place but also the association of the fun had by such a cute character as Noodle. It makes me long for a tranquil place like that in the tropical islands somewhere. And in Starbound--a game whose mere concept of traveling to the stars can get me choked up and misty-eyed--the music played in the outpost (which you saw me gush about many times) hit me even harder. After downloading the soundtrack, one day I sat there and listened to it with no game play, no game commentary, no distractions. It was just me and the music. Within seconds it made me break down sobbing, associating the music with traveling to the stars and meeting new civilizations as well as the harsh reality that I never will. I couldn't stop for 5 or 10 minutes, it impacted me so hard (plus it helped me release some depression I'd been suppressing for several days). And last year the phenomenal music from Ori & The Blind Forest also hit me hard in a deeply emotional way. Other games have had good music but haven't touched me in the same way at all. Among non-game music, listen to "Our Final Flight" by Fox Amoore. That piece makes me cry tears of happiness as I have the mental imagery of soaring up among the towering clouds, whether it's with a hang glider or wings on my back. Music can make us think of times, places, and experiences that are so incredibly beautiful, very often far more beautiful than anything we ever experience in life. I have to wonder if your newfound sobriety has had any effect on you in terms of appreciation for music and other arts. A few sobriety blogs back you mentioned your mental clarity allowing you to have so much more appreciation for life and the little experiences, so that got me wondering about the impact music has on you now compared to when you were drinking. (And speaking of a hang glider in the previous paragraph, when's the last time you've gone hang gliding?)

Music is an incredibly powerful thing for touching the emotions and imagination. The notes, chords, melodies, and everything can create such amazing feelings and put such incredible imagery into the mind, all merely by being sound. Of course, the sounds also tap into our past experiences and associations we've had with similar music. A few games you've played have had that ability to impact my emotions similar to the way this one does to you. In the Snake Pass soundtrack, the first set of levels in the "earth" world includes a piece of music that moves me to tears of such happiness, with the association of not only a beautiful tropical place but also the association of the fun had by such a cute character as Noodle. It makes me long for a tranquil place like that in the tropical islands somewhere. And in Starbound--a game whose mere concept of traveling to the stars can get me choked up and misty-eyed--the music played in the outpost (which you saw me gush about many times) hit me even harder. After downloading the soundtrack, one day I sat there and listened to it with no game play, no game commentary, no distractions. It was just me and the music. Within seconds it made me break down sobbing, associating the music with traveling to the stars and meeting new civilizations as well as the harsh reality that I never will. I couldn't stop for 5 or 10 minutes, it impacted me so hard (plus it helped me release some depression I'd been suppressing for several days). And last year the phenomenal music from Ori & The Blind Forest also hit me hard in a deeply emotional way. Other games have had good music but haven't touched me in the same way at all. Among non-game music, listen to "Our Final Flight" by Fox Amoore. That piece makes me cry tears of happiness as I have the mental imagery of soaring up among the towering clouds, whether it's with a hang glider or wings on my back. Music can make us think of times, places, and experiences that are so incredibly beautiful, very often far more beautiful than anything we ever experience in life. I have to wonder if your newfound sobriety has had any effect on you in terms of appreciation for music and other arts. A few sobriety blogs back you mentioned your mental clarity allowing you to have so much more appreciation for life and the little experiences, so that got me wondering about the impact music has on you now compared to when you were drinking. (And speaking of a hang glider in the previous paragraph, when's the last time you've gone hang gliding?)

Anonymous

If you love music soundtrack, then I can recommend the newly released cuphead. It's some great tunes :)

Anonymous

you are as beautiful as the song. don't ever let anyone lead you astray from the path of life.