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Tidal Rush starts with the beat that plays after completing the second phase of the final boss.įrom the booklet included with Splatune 2.Bomb Rush Blush does not fade out, but instead transitions to Tidal Rush, as what happens in-game.
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Octarmaments contains all three versions that coincide with the three phases of each boss.Octo Canyon contains all five versions that play depending on which zone the player is in.Inkopolis News has a section where Marina's record scratches play, and then ends properly.The sound clips that only play if the Control Pad is pressed are also present. Dubble Bath (DIY Remix) has brief moments where the sound is distorted as if a control stick was quickly tilted while in a lobby.Inkopolis Square starts with the main speaker music before fading into the background to play the jingles that play from other speakers in the Square, and then fading back in before the song finally fades out.The reverb effect on the trumpet in Broken Coral is removed.The synth solo in Endolphin Surge is changed.It has a proper ending as well, as opposed to fading out. Inkoming! sounds different when it starts to loop.Songs by Wet Floor and Off the Hook have louder vocals than their in-game versions.Some songs contain slight changes in arrangement from the versions used in the game. Nintendo Switch Presentation 2017 Soundtrack Get The Shining Future! (Kuma-san Shōkai Baito Boshū Video BGM) Oh well.Get The Shining Future! (A Message from Grizzco Industries – Background Music) I guess I have a lot of much worse things to be worrying about right now, though. That said I listen my music dumped through a YouTube to mp3 converter in shit quality, so what do I know. Vinyls just kinda seem useless to me, unless you're a super audiophile collector. Vinyls make more sense in that regard, as CDs are hardly collectible. Most OST releases are limited, therefore collectible. Wouldn't it just be more convenient to cheaply print CDs, which you can play in cars and CD players and game systems and plenty of things? Seems more versatile to me, and the quality wouldn't be horrible. Yeah yeah, audio quality, but in the case of video game music, it's coming from digital tunes either way. Undertale got vinyl before CD, and so is Sonic Mania. I've seen a few new games get vinyls before CD releases. I don't get why they're so damn popular for limited edition OST releases nowadays.