You're not the only one who played Crimson Skies, the PC original and Xbox sequel remain two of my favourite "hidden gem" games and I remember the music on both being spectacular.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought so. Thanks for this video and series, absolute quality.
good to see that more people realise the awesomeness of Baba Yetu, its really odd that you can find so great music in styles that seem completley out of the way from your main tastes.
@PcKaffe Yes, Baba Yetu is just an amazing song any way you slice it. For a game about diplomacy, history and leadership, the use of an african choir was a really unique and good choice. It gave the game a worldly quality, if that makes any sense. Everytime you booted up the game it felt like you were part of something bigger than the game... at least that's what I got from it. :)
You're not the only one who played Crimson Skies, the PC original and Xbox sequel remain two of my favourite "hidden gem" games and I remember the music on both being spectacular.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought so. Thanks for this video and series, absolute quality.
ForcesOfValour 1 year ago
good to see that more people realise the awesomeness of Baba Yetu, its really odd that you can find so great music in styles that seem completley out of the way from your main tastes.
PcKaffe 1 year ago
@PcKaffe Yes, Baba Yetu is just an amazing song any way you slice it. For a game about diplomacy, history and leadership, the use of an african choir was a really unique and good choice. It gave the game a worldly quality, if that makes any sense. Everytime you booted up the game it felt like you were part of something bigger than the game... at least that's what I got from it. :)
Supertrekkie4 1 year ago