Pandaxclone2
Pokemon Sprite Artist Hobbyist
Towns Folk
With Capcom's recent (read: this year) announcement of all main series Ace Attorney titles being ported in trilogy format on the Switch, plus a possible 7th game on the horizon, plus the very recent (read: last month) announcement of a second season to the Ace Attorney anime, I thought it'd be a nice time to talk about your favourite music from this franchise and why you like it.
Keep in mind, you don't have to be limited to just one track; whenever it suits your fancy to talk about a particular track you like, feel free to post it here. Also, considering the nature of some music being tied to plot-crucial moments, there will likely be spoilers below. You have been warned.
The Detention Centre track of Apollo Justice feels very somber to me, as if the full weight of the situation has been realized, and yet this is only the calm before the storm. It also contributes to the game's general theme of the Dark Age of Law. The pattern of the notes is not unlike a clock, ticking on and on as your time runs out, so you have to hurry and get enough evidence to help your client. That is why I like this track.
I like this track since it's about the closest we get to feeling as if we're talking to a deity herself, even though Queen Amara is simply human. Perhaps it's also the fact that we were all led to assume she was dead all this time, so it's appropriate that this music plays as if she's been resurrected from the dead.
Keep in mind, you don't have to be limited to just one track; whenever it suits your fancy to talk about a particular track you like, feel free to post it here. Also, considering the nature of some music being tied to plot-crucial moments, there will likely be spoilers below. You have been warned.
The Detention Centre track of Apollo Justice feels very somber to me, as if the full weight of the situation has been realized, and yet this is only the calm before the storm. It also contributes to the game's general theme of the Dark Age of Law. The pattern of the notes is not unlike a clock, ticking on and on as your time runs out, so you have to hurry and get enough evidence to help your client. That is why I like this track.
I like this track since it's about the closest we get to feeling as if we're talking to a deity herself, even though Queen Amara is simply human. Perhaps it's also the fact that we were all led to assume she was dead all this time, so it's appropriate that this music plays as if she's been resurrected from the dead.