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NeoGAF's Official Game Soundtracks of the 4th Generation: Results

Dark Schala

Eloquent Princess
The results from NeoGAF's Game Soundtracks of the 4th Generation vote are below. A sample of the discography for the winning composers are below, though there will, unfortunately, not be an archive built for these results. Much thanks to the 44 people who voted (+ the one interest ballot). Enjoy!

Results

1. Chrono Trigger – 267 points, 1 honorable mention

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Composers: Yasunori Mitsuda, Nobuo Uematsu, Noriko Matsueda

Corridors of Time
Boss Battle 1
Tyrano Lair

Noi said:
Chrono Trigger's tunes taught me how a good song at the right time can permanently leave a mark on my memories for some of the best scenes in a game. Mitsuda's "landmark" title soundtrack is arguably still his best.
Earthpainting said:
This was probably the easiest one to pick and rank. Chrono Trigger’s soundtrack is one of those soundtracks I listen to regularly. It has the ability to teleport me to other places and time periods with ease. The music is woven into the game so expertly that it feels impossible to detach the two, and that moments of near-silence even feel part of the score.
SatelliteOfLove said:
Mitsuda got his start on this, and unlike how I've shown people pushing chips beyond what they're thought capable, he on this album pushed himself too far. The silver lining is that you see the genesis of his storied haunting, aching melancholy, pairing with the prog chops of Uematsu like a champ.
zashga said:
It's impossible to talk about great Super Nintendo soundtracks without mentioning Chrono Trigger. I don't really have that much to add; I just love the way this game sounds. It does an amazing job keeping pace with and setting the tone for the game's many eclectic scenarios.
Rutger said:
This is a very easy vote for me, it's a perfect soundtrack, there's not a single low point to be found. Chrono Trigger would have a very strong chance of getting the number 1 spot from me if there is ever a "Soundtracks of all time" vote. Composed mostly by Yasunori Mitsuda, along with Nobuo Uematsu and Noriko Matsueda for several tracks, and I still consider it to be Mitsuda's finest work. There is no way I can narrow down my selection of songs to a handful, this game and its soundtrack means too much to me.

2. Final Fantasy VI – 195 points, 2 honorable mentions

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Composer: Nobuo Uematsu

Terra’s Theme
Aria di Mezzo Carattere
Dancing Mad

preta said:
What even needs to be said? While I'm not sure it's Uematsu's best soundtrack ever, it's definitely one of his most iconic, and the best of the era. Virtually every track is memorable, and it complements FFVI's beautifully melancholy atmosphere perfectly.
SatelliteOfLove said:
Uematsu's magnum opus.

Look at what all you get here: the greatest collection of leitmotifs in gaming history, the best end boss theme in history (even beating out Merciless Savior!!!), and a ton of tracks that push out and up on the SNES chip, threatening to set that badboy on fire. A master on top of his game, in a company on a real tear; simply a delight. These should not have fit on a SNES cart. Complete black magic. He was wearing those glowy eye pointy hats doing this.
zashga said:
This is peak Uematsu for me, with a ridiculous array of memorable character and location themes. I'm sure lots of people will mention the opera sequence, and for good reason. This is the high water mark for the greatest composer and series (musically) in gaming.
Zhao_Yun said:
FFVI is probably my favorite game of all time and part of the reason for it is definitely the glorious soundtrack. Imo FFVI features some of the most memorable and iconic scenes of the whole franchise and the soundtrack played a big role in that. You can’t think about the Opening scene of the game without Terra’s Theme in mind and the Opera Scene wouldn’t have had the impact that it had without the accompanying music. The soundtrack also features a great collection of character themes that fit the different characters perfectly as well as great battle themes with Dancing Mad being the final highlight. The 20 minute long Ending Theme is a testament for the amount of great tunes in this soundtrack.


3. Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy’s Kong Quest – 152 points

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Composers: David Wise

Stickerbush Symphony
In a Snow-Bound Land
Forest Interlude

jett said:
This is conceivably the ultimate SNES masterpiece. Back then I considered DKC to be the equivalent of black magic, and as EGM described it, it sounded like there was a CD stuck inside the cart. It was a close call between choosing this and DKC1, but the fact of the matter is that David Wise outdoes himself with the sequel. His decision to simulate the sound of a Korg synthesizer gives both of his DKC games a unique and superlative sound compared to the rest of the SNES catalog. Also, it has Stickerbush Symphony. Fatality.
Nocturnowl said:
DKC2's music combines atmosphere and melody in glorious harmony, ear worms for days, moody themes that put the exclamation point on the game’s Villain stronghold setting.

What arcane wizardy was Wise using to pull out this sound quality from the SNES? well I have no idea but I'm thankful for it as it’s stood as my favourite game OST for years now, only recently challenged by its spiritual successor.
Eolz said:
Really interesting use of the hardware by one of my favorite composers. Tracks are varied and dark, and gives a good sense of adventure all throughout the game. One of the best soundtracks of all time for sure. Everyone was excited to hear Wise returns to Donkey Kong with Tropical Freeze, and it was indeed excellent.

4. Sonic 3 & Knuckles – 93 points, honorable mentions

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Composers: Brad Buxer, Bobby Brooks, Darryl Ross, Geoff Grace, Doug Grigsby III, Scirocco, Michael Jackson (uncredited), Bo, Sachio Ogawa, Milpo, Masaru Setsumaru, Tatsuyuki Maeda, Tomonori Sawada, Masayuki Nagao, Jun Senoue, Howard Drossin

Ice Cap Zone Act 1
Flying Battery Zone
The Doomsday Zone

Shadow Hog said:
If there's one thing you can count on with a Sonic game, it's that, regardless of the game's actual quality, the soundtrack will be on-point (with two noted exceptions). This was true from the word "go", with the very first stage in the first Sonic the Hedgehog, but I think it hit its peak here, with the third installment and its expansion pack.

This thing is jam-packed with excellent tunes. As before, every Zone (stage theme) has a unique melody, but unlike before, every single individual act has a unique take on that Zone's melody.
MineralCraver420 said:
Sonic soundtracks have always been good, so how do you make the best one? Have Michael freaking Jackson involved, that's how.
SatelliteOfLove said:
It took forever, (and almost as much wrangling and snooping as it takes to get credits on soundteam_JDK) to wrangle just who wrote the infamous 3, and I hope I was on point for that mysterious and infamous OST.

But beyond that, these are two of the absolute FINEST examples of frequency modulation going, not to mention quick and energetic composition. No space is wasted, no notes just filling space or keeping time. Intense, sharp, driving, and damn near-flawless.

5. Donkey Kong Country – 78 points, 5 honorable mentions

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Composer: Robin Beanland, Eveline Fischer, David Wise, Yukio Kaneoka

Island Swing
Fear Factory
Aquatic Ambience

Earthpainting said:
A masterclass in finding that elusive balance between ambience and melodic music. While I don’t have a lot of love for the Donkey Kong franchise, I can’t deny the quality of its music.
Evilisk said:
DKC's soundtrack is just one I have a lot of fondness for (even if, much like the game itself, is surpassed by later entries in the Country series). It's one of the first games (alongside Street Fighter 2) that really made me pay attention to video game music, so it will always have a special place in my heart. Even without all the foaming though, it's still a great soundtrack. Aquatic Ambience in particular is about as good as anything from the later games' soundtracks.


6. Streets of Rage 2 – 77 points, 3 honorable mentions

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Composer: Yuzo Koshiro, Motohiro Kawashima

Go Straight
Never Return Alive
Dreamer

MineralCraver420 said:
An easy contender for best video game soundtrack ever. Beautifully optimised to the strengths of the Genesis' power chip, with no bad tracks at all.
gelf said:
I could list every track in the entire game here really but I'll restrain myself. Might be my number one soundtrack of all time.
SatelliteOfLove said:
A good bit harsher and rawer than 1s, 2 gives less of a "this is a Detroit House album scoring a video game" feel and more of a blueprint to what like, 60% of subsequent great MD/Genny OSTs would sound like from here on out. Go ahead, relisten to Sonic 2, 3 & K, and other high-energy soundtracks from the system after listening to this. Koshiro is a physical god of music, after all.

7. Super Metroid – 71 points, 4 honorable mentions

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Composers: Hirokazu Tanaka, Kenji Yamamoto, Minako Hamano

Brinstar - Red Soil Wetland Area
Theme of Super Metroid
Big Boss Confrontation BGM (Ridley, Draigon)

Kirk said:
The music of Super Metroid was totally necessary to the experience, and it gave each area a distinct feeling.
zashga said:
The only science fiction game on my list, with the arguable exception of Earthbound. Super Metroid has a relatively small soundtrack that's equal parts ambience and more overt location themes. This is the definitive sound of Metroid.
Rutger said:
While it's not quite able to reach my favorite Metroid game, Super Metroid is still really good, and it was the start of many great Metroid themes.

8. Street Fighter II – 67 points, 5 honorable mentions

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Composers: Capcom Sound Team Alph Lyla (Shun Nishigaki, Isao Abe, Yoko Shimomura)

Note that this includes all eligible releases of Street Fighter II in this generation

America (Guile)
Thailand (M. Bison)
Japan (Ryu)

jett said:
The proverbial fighting game classic, the originator, the kickstarter of an entire genre 25 years ago, and Yoko Shimomura’s soundtrack is still the most beloved among all fighters. Does Guile’s Theme truly go with everything? Yes, yes it does.
Jucksalbe said:
I thought long about which version to use here. I generally prefer the SNES soundtrack over the arcade one, but even within those there are plenty to choose from. But overall it's the original game whose music is the most "classic" and therefore feels the most appropriate. There'll probably be written enough aobut the different character themes, so I just want to give credit (no pun intended!) to the "Continue" music. It's unnerving, it's pressing, I'm just glad I played this on SNES and didn't have to insert a quarter everytime this begged me to retry.
Evilisk said:
One of my favorite fighting game soundtracks ever. There are just so many classic themes here, and some of these renditions still haven't been topped by later games. My favorites have to be Balrog and Cammy's themes. There's just a nice atmosphere to these songs that differs from immediately appealing tracks like Ken or Guile's themes. Really though, almost every track is a winner here, it's just a damn good soundtrack. (Also I have to give props to the SNES version of Blanka's theme, it's probably my favorite rendition of his theme)

9. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past – 65 points, honorable mention

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Composer: Koji Kondo

Time of the Falling Rain
Dark World
Ganon

MineralCraver420 said:
This soundtrack is the basis for most of the Zelda songs that are still in the games. Later games may have done better versions of these tracks, but it is important to know where they all come from.
Nocturnowl said:
Here lies quite what I’d argue as the quintessential Zelda soundtrack, from this game classic themes sprang forth to recur as series mainstays, Hyrule Castle, Kakariko Village, Zelda’s theme/lullaby, Ganon’s theme and even the Dark World gets a lot of use these days. It’s pretty much on from the word go with one heck of a title jingle, the perfect marriage of music and visual as the triforce spins in, the sword strikes and the booming power of adventure rocks out of the speakers, ready for adventure.


10. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 – 64 points, 3 honorable mentions

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Composer: Masato Nakamura

Chemical Plant Zone
Casino Night Zone (2P)
Final Boss

SatelliteOfLove said:
Damn, Nakamura, how you get so funk? Love the boss fight themes in this one. Real burners.
 

Dark Schala

Eloquent Princess
11. Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island – 55 points, 4 honorable mentions

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Composer: Koji Kondo

Underground
Overworld (Touch Fuzzy, Get Dizzy)
Baby Bowser

Blasian Persuasion said:
My favorite soundtrack out of any Mario universe game. There are a lot of cheery, joyful tracks that go along with the game's bright childlike aesthetic such as "Flower Garden" and "Athletic", but you also have the incredibly chill track "Underground" which remains one of the best video game tracks ever, the iconic "Castle & Fortress" and the metal sounding final boss music in "Baby Bowser". This soundtrack also has the best rendition of "Starman Theme" in the series. Koji Kondo did an amazing job with this soundtrack and it may be his best work.
Eolz said:
I remembered this soundtrack being longer and more diverse than it actually is, but it is actually re-using some delicious tunes during the whole game. Expertly composed, this is once again an OST that helps making a game a classic forever. Nothing else could fit a Yoshi game better than this. Extremely joyful, it also has some themes reflecting some other emotions.
demidar said:
Yoshi's Island's soundtrack is as charming as its aesthetics. Striped with cheery tunes to accompany the colourful world and light-hearted atmosphere, the soundtrack is easily digestible. Because of how simple it is, I can replay it in my mind with ease, which is a big part of the reason why it's on this list. Doesn't mean it's necessarily great (it's teetering on the edge of great and very good), but in terms of formative soundtracks in a babby's gooey brain who has not played as many games in that generation that he would have liked, Yoshi's Island stuck around. The game's full of cool tracks, but Underground in particular sticks out like a sore thumb. This track for some reason makes me feel pretty down. Maybe it's because of its lethargic notes and wheezing accompaniment and those crystalline chimes being such a stark contrast from the rest of the game's. Not even the Castle themes brings me down nearly as much (though that's more foreboding than anything). Underground was probably made with that in mind, but its effects feel more intense than it was intended to me. I have distant admiration of that piece of music.


12. Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars – 50 points, 4 honorable mentions

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Composers: Yoko Shimomura (+ some arrangements of Nobuo Uematsu/Koji Kondo’s works)

Beware the Forest’s Mushrooms
Battle Against Culex
Super Pipe House

Blasian Persuasion said:
Out of all the SNES music I listen to I think I listen to Kirby Super Star's the most, but I believe this Squaresoft Nintendo RPG has the best soundtrack out of this generation. Yoko Shimomura manages to make Mario music that sounds like it was designed by Koji Kondo himself. There is a lot of range with this soundtrack, more than most. You have the nostalgic tracks with "Super Pipe House", "Long, Long Ago", and "Heart Beating a Little Faster", but you also have new compositions that become new classics... "Sunken Ship" stands out as being eerie and fittingly atmospheric. The soundtrack instills joy, tension, tranquility, and sadness. It's a wonderful soundtrack that stands the test of time.
Eolz said:
Like the game itself, it basically established a lot of conventions for the future Mario RPGs, yet also has a really unique feel. Some compositions you wouldn't expect in any game, and some other with a really distinct Square RPG music, it is actually quite diverse, and thus, really more interesting than most other big RPGs from this gen. Stands pretty well on its own, it used well the SNES sound chip.
demidar said:
Given that it is an RPG and it treads settings and situations that aren't in platformers, it's interesting to see how the composers would stretch established tones into unfamiliar territory, to great effect. Most of the great tracks are found in the town themes, but there are a couple of gems lying around. Booster's Tower for example, and the generic boss theme is played far enough from each other to not get boring (unlike the battle theme of which there's only one of). And of course the forest maze theme that everyone knows of.


13. Castlevania: Rondo of Blood – 50 points, 2 honorable mentions

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Composers: Konami Kukeiha Club (akiropito, Jigokuguruma Nakamura, Sanoppi, Metal Yuhki, Michiru Yamane), Satoe Terashima, Jun Funahashi

Bloodlines
Slash
Den

Nocturnowl said:
…Then we’ve got Rondo of Blood which got to leverage the enhanced quality offered by CDs on the PC Engine to just go and be rad with wailing guitars, brass and what not because DISC POWER!

As such this one in particular feels very different to the SNES SCIV, while I find that game to have a much more thematically fitting soundtrack there’s something about the sheer audacity of Rondo of Blood that just works, well except that Samba ending theme for Maria (well actually still a lot better than “I am the Wind” eh Symphony of the Night?).
Morrigan Stark said:
The precursor to the game with the greatest OST ever (Symphony of the Night), it's no surprise that its OST would be so good, even if Yamane-san wasn't involved.
Eolz said:
The best rendition of Castlevenia most classic themes, and a soundtrack that like its game, is often forgotten in favor of its SNES cousin. Really nice melodies and instruments.


14. Ys III: Wanderers From Ys – 47 points, 3 honorable mentions

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Composer: Mieko Ishikawa

Note that this includes all eligible releases of Ys III in this generation

The Strongest Foe
Valestein Castle
The Boy’s Got Wings

SatelliteOfLove said:
Mieko Ishikawa's finest soundtrack. Powerful, complex, driving melodies that tempt one of your hands off the controller to throw up horns with alarming regularity. No matter what form you play it on, from the X68000's crisp clarion call tone, the PC-88's thudding sharpness, or the Oath remake's 90s EDM meets Power Metal Force, you are guarenteed two things: great tunes and a melted face.
Morrigan Stark said:
Ys has always been known for its kick-ass soundtracks and this one is no exception. A lot of those tracks were re-arranged in Oath of Felghana, but the originals are still pretty damn good, especially the PC Engine versions.
Zhao_Yun said:
Ys III probably features my favorite Nihon Falcom OST of all time and even though the new arrangements for The Oath in Felghana remake made it even better, the original Ys III soundtrack is still a masterpiece. It features some of my most beloved dungeon and boss battle themes such as Valestein Castle, A Searing Struggle and The Strongest Foe.


15. Secret of Mana – 44 points, 5 honorable mentions

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Composer: Hiroki Kikuta

Fear of the Heavens
Into the Thick of It
The Dark Star

Jucksalbe said:
From plenty of very sad and depressing tunes - which is in itself a great achievement what Kikuta managed to get out of the SNES sound chip here - to the rather cheerful ones that make you hum along.
SatelliteOfLove said:
I've spoke alot about people pushing soundchips to do things they weren't originally designed to be capable of, but Kikuta's breakout soundtrack SoM is probably the truest posterboy for this. Gotta love his "3D Sound" going on here; just texture all errwhrr, and just a little whalesong.
Siddiqui said:
Kikuta had made some music before but this was actually his first game OST. Kenji Ito - who did the previous Seiken Densetsu's soundtrack - was originally supposed to do this soundtrack as well. However, Square was making a ton of games and Ito was needed for SaGa. And so kind of like what would happen later with Mitsuda and Chrono Trigger sound effects designer Hiroki Kikuta was allowed in for this critical job and ended up making one of the best soundtracks of the generation out of nowhere.


16. Mega Man X – 44 points, 4 honorable mentions

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Composers: Capcom Sound Team Alph Lyla (Setsuo Yamamoto, Makoto Tomozawa, Yuki Iwai, Yuko Takehara)

Intro Stage
Spark Mandrill
Sigma Stage 1

MineralCraver420 said:
Often in discussions of retro video game music, the term "Mega Man X guitar" is brought up. The fact that this soundtrack is so defining for the SNES soundchip, and is so commonly aped even to this day, says a lot about its quality.
Jucksalbe said:
With this sequel to (or redesign of) the original Mega Man series came a severe change in style. The games lost a bit of their lightheartedness and eventually the series went the way of the Sonic franchise. Shame about that. But with it all came a change in musical style as well. The game's more serious, so the music had to become a bit more rock and maybe even metal to correspond. Now that introduction may have sounded a bit negative, but the result actually is a fantastic soundtrack.
Nocturnowl said:
One of the most consistently good soundtracks on the SNES, which is to say while dwarfed in number of tracks by other SNES big hitters it makes the most of what it’s got hitting out a catchy tune for each stage and even makes the password screen have a full minute plus long track. Mostly known for its distinct guitar sound which turns up a lot because Mega Man is back and X…TREME so we gotta really harness that nineties revolution.
Rutger said:
It's hard to think of a Mega Man game without some good music, I'll go with MMX here since it's the Mega Man game that stands out to me the most in this gen.


17. Final Fantasy IV – 40 points, 6 honorable mentions

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Composer: Nobuo Uematsu

The Red Wings
The Dreadful Fight
The Final Battle

Jucksalbe said:
Say what you want about this game, but at very least the soundtrack is excellent. Great main theme, great battle tracks (most importantly!) and some nice overworld themes.
Kirk said:
Going from the NES to this was world-changing. This turned Final Fantasy from an RPG into an epic. The music was a much bigger leap than the graphics.
Morrigan Stark said:
Uematsu in his prime, eclipsed only by FFVI. Having good battle themes and overworld themes is important to me in an RPG, and this one has some of the best tracks in this category. I also typically don't care for most generic peaceful town themes too much (I don't hate them, just find them a bit dull) but for some reason I always liked the melancholy-sounding town theme of FFIV. And in this one you hear a bunch of cool military beats done really well with the Red Wings/Baron themes. Just an amazingly consistent OST that needs a spot on this list.


18. The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening – 39 points, 3 honorable mentions

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Composers: Kazumi Totaka, Kozue Ishikawa, Minako Hamano

Koholint Island
Tal Tal Heights
Ballad of the Wind Fish

AniHawk said:
there's something about the fact that this is on the game boy, with all of its limitations, from the two (four... well, eight) buttons, to the green-tinted screen, that actually made this feel just right. the sparseness in the soundtrack, for being on such a primitive system, also contributed a lot to that dreamlike feeling.
Sneaky Gato said:
This was the first game I ever played and to this day I regularly replay it. The soundtrack was the first introduction to game music and I loved every bit of it. It had this adventurous sound that made me feel as if I really was going on an adventure.


19. Terranigma – 39 points, 1 honorable mention

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Composers: Masanori Hikichi, Miyoko Kobayashi

Crysta
The Underworld
A Hero’s Final Day

Earthpainting said:
This soundtrack is able to speak to me on an almost synesthetic level. It does a great job at capturing the grand scale of the game’s world, and what a tiny part you play in it. This plays wonderfully with its theme of the influence a single person can have on said world.

The game does not place a strong emphasis on character, and more on the world itself. The result is that most of the music represents places, rather than people or moments. Since the world is based on our real world, you can easily recognise the geographical music influences.
Jucksalbe said:
It's not all doom and gloom, of course. But I feel this is the strongest aspect of the OST and the parts where the music contributes the most to the overall feel of the game. A game's music most important job is to set the proper mood to a game or just a certain scene and I feel this is what Terranigma's soundtrack excels at.
woopWOOP said:
The pieces that go with the different revival scenes still send chills down my spine. The game also has some great music for its towns and dungeons. Great ending/credits music.


20. Kirby Super Star – 36 points, 1 honorable mention

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Composers: Jun Ishikawa, Dan Miyakawa

Green Greens
Gourmet Race
Marx’s Theme

Blasian Persuasion said:
Out of all the SNES music I listen to I think I listen to Kirby Super Star's the most, but I believe this Squaresoft Nintendo RPG has the best soundtrack out of this generation. Yoko Shimomura manages to make Mario music that sounds like it was designed by Koji Kondo himself. There is a lot of range with this soundtrack, more than most. You have the nostalgic tracks with "Super Pipe House", "Long, Long Ago", and "Heart Beating a Little Faster", but you also have new compositions that become new classics like my five favorites listed below. "Sunken Ship" stands out as being eerie and fittingly atmospheric. The soundtrack instills joy, tension, tranquility, and sadness. It's a wonderful soundtrack that stands the test of time.
demidar said:
Almost every single track seems composed solely to be catchy, and by god it works, though with so many catchy tracks only the cream of the crop catches on. I especially like how strong the beats are in almost every single track, for me who's likely incapable of appreciating musical nuance and prefers to be punched in the face (by sound waves). It's why I tend towards music with harsh and rapid oscillations in pitch (what I would personally call “crunchy”). Following on that, most instances of held notes don't flow into each other, rather progressing in a staircase fashion contrary to what a lot of other composers were doing, or at least the ones I was exposed to. My favourite track of the though breaks that style, Meta Knight's Revenge. That track brought a sense of urgency nothing else does. It, as a whole, is more complicated than every other non-penultimate piece of music with more sections and a different tone with it.
Sneaky Gato said:
My introduction to the pink puff ball the bouncy music served to win me over immediately.


Past Threads

Fourth Console Generation Voting Thread
Fifth Console Generation Results (by Nocturnowl)
Fifth Console Generation Voting Thread (by Nocturnowl)
Sixth Console Generation Results and Archive
Sixth Console Generation Voting thread
2015 Results and Archive
2015 Voting thread
2014 Results and Archive
2014 Voting Thread
2013 Results and Archive
2013 Voting Thread
2012 Results and Archive
2012 Voting Thread
2011 Results and Archive
2011 Voting Thread
2010 Results and Archive
2010 Voting Thread

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Discography

Now that GAF has picked its winners, it's time to explore these composers' bodies of work! As you may have noticed, several of the winning soundtracks this year featured more than one composer. We decided to stick to highlighting one composer per winning soundtrack for the sake of brevity, so please know that we're not attempting to snub anyone that wasn’t included.

Yasunori Mitsuda

White Torches of Heresy (Soul Sacrifice Delta)
Grab your sword (Seelisch Tact)
Close Reasoning (Black Butler: Book of Murder)​


Nobuo Uematsu

Dragonsong (Final Fantasy XIV)
Megadimension Neptunia VII: Main Theme (Megadimension Neptunia VII)
Wings of Black Silver (Granblue Fantasy)​


David Wise

Hot Top Volcano (Diddy Kong Racing)
Five Stories to Heaven (Tengami)
Jungle Challenge (Yooka Laylee)​


Michael Jackson
Who Is It (Sonic 3)
Smooth Criminal (Sonic 3)
Stranger in Moscow (Sonic 3)​


Yuzo Koshiro

Glory Days (Wangan Midnight Maximum Tune 4)
Disturbances: The One Called From Beyond (Persona Q)
Comedy (Time & Eternity)​


Hirokazu Tanaka

Moonside (Earthbound)
Stage 1 (Kid Icarus)
Ground BGM (Super Mario Land)​


Yoko Shimomura

Somnus (Final Fantasy XV)
All for One (Kingdom Hearts: Dream Drop Distance)
Dreamy Somnom Labyrinth (Mario and Luigi RPG 4)​


Koji Kondo

Stone Tower Temple (The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask)
Good Egg Galaxy (Super Mario Galaxy)
Chainlink Charge (Super Mario 3D World)​


Masato Nakamura

SWEET SWEET SWEET (Sonic 06)​


Mikio Saito



Falcom Sound Team jdk

My Blaze, My Truth (Tokyo Xanadu)
Transcend Beat (Sen no Kiseki II)
The Azure Arbitrator (Ao no Kiseki)​


Hiroki Kikuta

Vacuum Tube Girls Symphony
Simulacra (Atelier Escha & Logy)
Afterimage (Sakura Relaxation)​


Yuki Iwai

Gaza's Cavern (Gargoyle's Quest II)
Fight a Battle (Goof Troop)
Zero (Mega Man X2)​


Kazumi Totaka



Miyoko Kobayashi

Wise Men’s Tomb (The Granstream Saga)
Ghost Girl for Meruru (Atelier Meruru)
Hermina and Culus (Hermina and Culus)​


Jun Ishikawa

Ripple Star (Kirby 64)
City Trial (Kirby's Air Ride)
Dirty&Beauty (Kirby Triple Deluxe)​
 

DJIzana

Member
Surprised no Earthbound, Chrono Cross or Phantasy Star Online. Pretty solid list though and at list Chrono Trigger is there.
 

Dark Schala

Eloquent Princess
I'd also like to make an additional note that only 44 people voted for this list, so if you didn't vote over the entire month that the voting thread was up, them's the breaks.

A huge thanks to the people who did take the time to vote. It was a huge pleasure reading your posts.
 
Wow, I quoted a lot. I don't see why people like DKC2's soundtrack so much; there's only five tracks I listen to from it.

Actually, surprised Super Mario World didn't make it given the popularity of Mario. That OST is just okay though to me.
 

jett

D-Member
Yass plenty from my top 10 made it. That's a quality top 20 regardless. Great work Dark Schala!
 

Bakkus

Member
Damn didn't know this voting contest existed. Would have voted if I knew. Really good list despite no Earthbound.

I don't agree with some of the music examples being used. Other than Corridors of Time I think CT has better music than the examples posted. And Athletic not being one of the examples on YL? That's the most iconic
and best
song in the game!
 

Dark Schala

Eloquent Princess
I don't agree with some of the music examples being used. Other than Corridors of Time I think CT has better music than the examples posted. And Athletic not being one of the examples on YL? That's the most iconic
and best
song in the game!
I just took samples from voters' lists. That's just what happened.

As for the Chrono Trigger picks, the other two tracks are representative of what the other composers on the soundtrack worked on. I don't think it would be utterly demonstrative of the composer listing if I only included Mitsuda's tracks when Uematsu worked on a fraction of Disc 2 (ie: the prehistory stuff and the future stuff when Mitsuda got sick) and Matsueda worked on the boss theme that's used for the majority of the game.
 

Grexeno

Member
Can't wait to give all these a listen............after all of the yearly awards and other generation awards. :p

Can't wait for the 7th gen thread, though.
 

GamerJM

Banned
Great list. I would have voted but I didn't really feel like listening to much game music this last month so I couldn't listen to enough music to compile my opinions to vote. I might still do my own personal list for my personal satisfaction.

My gut feeling is that S3+K has my favorite OST though. I don't even like that game very much (it's my least favorite of the Genesis-era Sonic games and I even like most modern Sonic games more than it, I know I'm crazy, though I haven't played it in a long time and my opinion's probably colored by me sucking at it as a kid), but that OST is just magnificent. It's the perfect representation of everything great about the sound of the Genesis. But Chrono Trigger is a totally worthy number 1.

Only thing I'm disappointed in is FF4 not making the top 10. I'm actually of the opinion that it's Square's best music work of the 16-bit era, and so much of that music is just so iconic to me. It's all what I think of when I think of Final Fantasy music.
 

AniHawk

Member
thanks schala for the thread and using my quote - i actually was surprised to see link's awakening up there.
 

Evilisk

Member
It always feels weird to get quoted in Voting threads

Can't wait to give all these a listen............after all of the yearly awards and other generation awards. :p

Can't wait for the 7th gen thread, though.

Is 7th Gen next?

I know I can't vote in a 3rd Gen thread at all if we're having one
 

Evilisk

Member
???

Just toss a one-vote post towards Outrun or Journey to Silius for me then.

I just mean that 4th gen is the earliest gen of gaming for me, I don't think I've played anything from earlier than that. Though I'm also going to be really busy in a few weeks, so even if I wanted to, I wouldn't really have the time to start playing games or looking for soundtracks from that gen.
 

Shaneus

Member
Seemed like too much effort for me to vote (everyone's entry was super wordy) so I gave it a miss. Maybe if I had, the results wouldn't be so heavily weighted towards SNES titles :(
 

Siddiqui

Member
Great list, thanks for putting it all together. Given the point difference I'm guessing even if more people voted the top 3 probably wouldn't change.

Seemed like too much effort for me to vote (everyone's entry was super wordy) so I gave it a miss.

I was wondering if anyone would feel this way but just posting your list was fine - several people did just that. We would have loved to have had your votes in.
 

demidar

Member
???

Just toss a one-vote post towards Outrun or Journey to Silius for me then.

Wut about Ducktales? Castlevania and Mega Man 2 too.

Chrono Trigger getting first was a foregone conclusion.

Besides Mario, Gen 3 would be completely uncharted territory for me.

Surprised EarthBound didn't even hit the top 20. Disappointed that only me and 1 other person mentioned Secret of Evermore as well.

I wrote off Final Fantasy V but I assumed it would at least get somewhere. I guess not eh?

Clash on the Big Bridge eclipses everything in that game I suppose.
 

cordy

Banned
I didn't see this damn I missed out. I would have voted MMX as #1. Love that game but overall great list. Just makes you appreciate the music of the past more. I'd take past themes of anything these days.
 

Jucksalbe

Banned
Mystic Quest Legend didn't even make the top 20, you monsters! :p

I'm glad to see that - just like in the "games of gen 4" vote - Terranigma made top 20 again. That game deserves more recognition.

Thank you, Dark Schala, for all the work you put in this, despite that low voter turnout!

Now about all that Sonic in the top 10....
 

Morrigan Stark

Arrogant Smirk
Thanks Schala! Sad that so few people voted. :(

Also, can't believe CT is beating FFVI once again. Sigh. No Phantasy Star either, which is disappointing.

Surprised no Earthbound, Chrono Cross or Phantasy Star Online. Pretty solid list though and at list Chrono Trigger is there.
Gen 4... -_-
 

TheMoon

Member
Terranigma at 19! Yes! At least GAF seems to finally start waking up to the greatness. :D

Sad that so few people voted. :(

In my case, whenever I see these vote threads for "[insert] of Gen [number]" I get overwhelmed with all the options and feel like I need to refresh my memory on everything and that's of course craziness but that tends to put me off of voting. When I don't just miss a thread entirely, like this one (the vote version). ^^
 

zashga

Member
Nice! Thanks for running the poll and collecting the results. The Genesis selections are particularly interesting to me since I never really played them back then. Got some listening to do. ;)
 

Celine

Member
I listened to that Terranigma Crysta track and man that was good. I might have to play the game now.
Terranigma finished within the TOP 20 for both the recent best Gen 4 threads on GAF (best games of the generation and best soundtrack).
Gaffers that haven't yet played it need to give it a serious consideration.
 

Mexen

Member
Sometimes, GAF gets it right.

Thumbs up for voting for Chrono Trigger, FF VI, Sonic the Hedgehog and Bare Knuckle. Some of the best music in video games even today.
 

Eolz

Member
Wow, didn't expect a result thread nor to be quoted several times. Thanks for that and all your work!

Really nice list in the end, some surprises here and there, and the full nomination list is always good :)
Hope more people will show up for the best OST of the year, or at any other vote! Shame, that was a great generation to vote for.
 

NEO0MJ

Member
Great work, Schala.
Earthbound was robbed!

Wow, didn't expect a result thread nor to be quoted several times. Thanks for that and all your work!

Well, it's not like many commented :p

I would have added something but last few days were heck-tick for me.
 
Looked back at my vote for the 5th generation and noticed I forgot to give notable tracks for Banjo-Kazooie. It annoys me. I would edit the post to fix it, but I don't see the point now.

If I did I would've chosen Click Clock Wood (Autumn), Treasure Trove Cove (Underwater), and the Mighty Jinjonator
 

maxcriden

Member
Thanks as always for your amazing work on these threads, Dark Schala!

I wonder how high Terranigma would rank in this and the GOTG thread if it was available in NA. I want to play it badly. My SFC with carts of that and SD3 is waiting for me to know Japanese well enough to play....
 

Rutger

Banned
Whether it's the voting thread or the results thread, I'm always a little late to realize it exists, haha...

I'm not surprised at Chrono Trigger at number 1, even ignoring my love for its soundtrack, it's something that many would put high on their list.

I'm glad I was able to put together a vote despite being busy at the time, these threads are always fun. I'll keep an eye out for the next one.
 
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