Posted May 22, 2025 by YannZ
For Asami’s Journey, I didn’t score a fantasy world. I scored a day.
A slice-of-life moment inside a stormy greenhouse, where rhythm, pacing, and softness had to hold emotional weight without ever interrupting the game.
The core soundtrack is made up of three 3:44 seamless loops, plus a soft ambient intro and a brief dramatic stinger. The result is modular, story-aligned music that can evolve with the episode’s pacing—or quietly stay out of the way.
All three loops share the same tempo (92 BPM) and length (3 minutes and 44 seconds), and are built for clean transitions—either immediate or through a soft fade.
They are:
A Loop – piano & flute
B Loop – adds bass clarinet & triangle
C Loop – adds string ensemble & cymbals
Each loop brings in one or two new emotional layers while keeping the melodic identity consistent—like watching the same day unfold under a shifting light. It’s subtle, but deliberate.
The stinger at the end? It’s based on the same orchestration as C, just heightened—made to be triggered at the peak of tension or a narrative resolution.
If you're working on a game with episode-like pacing, these loops are designed to follow that rhythm:
Start with a soft 2-chord ambient intro loop
Transition to Loop A once the player gains control
Move to Loop B when stakes rise
Move to Loop C near the climax
Trigger the Climax Stinger optionally after C, before looping back or fading out
Alternatively, you can:
Use A, B, or C as standalone loops for cozy, reflective levels
Re-trigger Intro + A when the player returns to calm
Loop any one of them indefinitely, depending on scene energy
You don’t need adaptive middleware to make it feel dynamic—each loop is self-contained and cleanly structured.
🔗 Contemplative Fantasy Vol. 2 on Spotify
🔗 Download the full pack on Itch
This volume is a love letter to quiet resilience and the soft drama of daily tasks.
If you’re building something heartfelt, narrative, or just in need of a calming underscore—this one’s for you.
Let me know how you use it. Or just send me a screenshot—I love seeing these tracks in the wild.
– YannZ