Crazy how Zack Bower decided to make one of the best tracks in the game for this mission. It’s not a stretch to say that the soundtrack is one of the reasons I keep replaying Ready Or Not.
so great, you can hear the remorse, the fear, the anger, the years of training being put in practice once more, to protect not only the innocent, but also the very own officers, fucking awesome
@@victorsantos2326 if you look at the one mission with that burning van in the forest, the guy you arrest has tapes specifically for you to hear, he was trying to tell you that you’re being controlled and what not
First clear, and hearing the piano bit right as my team brought order to chaos is something i wish i could experience for the first time again. We had spent essentially the entire 15 minute session in an intense firefight, and hearing that was amazing.
Outside of the callbacks to Greased Palms and Rusted Belt, I can't help but wonder if Zack took some inspiration from the New York theme of Splinter Cell Double Agent, especially when the guitar returns at 6:57.
0:44 rusted belt 2:07Greased palms 5:14 6:25 Ends of the earth Illegal immigrants in Mexico turn into gangsters and use 3D printers to make their smuggled weapons more powerful.
The beachside home motif is used to highlight how tragic this situation is, hurricane destruction and blown cover due to a mistake and obviously the poor mutilated cop. The cartel and postal motif is actually the Los Locos leitmotif, it appears in every mission they are apart of besides the beach house map
@@lobaandrade7172 The implementation of the leitmotif from beachside home might also be linked to the full auto weapons the Los Locos use themselves. Those guy let er rip in full auto like no one's business.
Crazy how Zack Bower decided to make one of the best tracks in the game for this mission. It’s not a stretch to say that the soundtrack is one of the reasons I keep replaying Ready Or Not.
The music in this game is insane. Definitely up there on the top 10 best OSTs of any game i've played.
Dude , I just… look , it sounds crazy , but what if the guy is actually Zach Beever from Project Zomboid and he just tries to keep himself unknown
so great, you can hear the remorse, the fear, the anger, the years of training being put in practice once more, to protect not only the innocent, but also the very own officers, fucking awesome
well people speculate that judge is a sleeper agent designed to take these missions with no fear.
@@Gherkinslmao, but really, no human being has no fear, the only thing that we can do is to control it, dominate it, and they do that pretty well
@@victorsantos2326 if you look at the one mission with that burning van in the forest, the guy you arrest has tapes specifically for you to hear, he was trying to tell you that you’re being controlled and what not
Thank you for coming back and uploading this, Zack Bower kills it once again.
This track made that mission feel so much more badass than it really is.
First clear, and hearing the piano bit right as my team brought order to chaos is something i wish i could experience for the first time again. We had spent essentially the entire 15 minute session in an intense firefight, and hearing that was amazing.
Outside of the callbacks to Greased Palms and Rusted Belt, I can't help but wonder if Zack took some inspiration from the New York theme of Splinter Cell Double Agent, especially when the guitar returns at 6:57.
It's very similar to what you hear in Ends of the Earth, which you can hear also in Lawmaker
haze out here bringing order to chaos
Feels like a redemption arc going on at the end there.
This sounds a lot like one of the Max Payne 3 soundtracks while also managing to have the creepy twisted feel of this game
0:44 rusted belt
2:07Greased palms
5:14
6:25 Ends of the earth
Illegal immigrants in Mexico turn into gangsters and use 3D printers to make their smuggled weapons more powerful.
5:14
can we get lawmaker and dorms? one of them has a piano track at the end that's so nice
Yeah I think that's the Lawmaker soundtrack. We we're so pumped when that piano kicked in!
@@Defox03it's actually 6:58 on this, at least what I was looking for
@@goofedman ah my bad then, lawmaker also has a piano though
yooo thanks bro
Sound like a little leitmotif from the beachside house and from the cartel tunnels. Maybe even the postal facility.
The beachside home motif is used to highlight how tragic this situation is, hurricane destruction and blown cover due to a mistake and obviously the poor mutilated cop.
The cartel and postal motif is actually the Los Locos leitmotif, it appears in every mission they are apart of besides the beach house map
@@lobaandrade7172 The implementation of the leitmotif from beachside home might also be linked to the full auto weapons the Los Locos use themselves. Those guy let er rip in full auto like no one's business.
@@joanpato4852what the Tran brothers did to Los Suenos’ gun crime epidemic is irreversible
thanks!
nice
5:14 sounds like grand theft auto 5 mission music