As for me, I always liked gamerips a bit more because it would contain everything that a game contains and that I heard in a game, which is mostly not the case with OST’s. But on the other hand, OST’s mostly have bonus tracks or lyrics or something that would make them especial. In most cases its good to have them both 🙂
Your thinking:…
Yep. I usually try and find the O.S.T. if I can’t find a good gamerip. A good majority of the people on this forum rip good stuff though. It just depends on where you can find it.
If you’re a collector, OSTs probably will appeal you more.
If you want as much music as possible, you’ll most likely go for the Rip.
Also, some OSTs have rearranged versions of the game tunes (such as ZX and ZXA OSTs), and therefore are completely different to the actual game sounds.
Of course, if you want every note written for the game, the rip is your only option – but generally I prefer a soundtrack; both for reasons of sound quality and measured presentation. 🙂
Gamerips are most of the time more complete than OST, but OST often contains music that is not contained in the game (arrangements, remixes..)
As for the quality of the music, they both varies depending the ripper/the method used/the format of the game/the way used to rip it…
Also note that ~ 90% of games does not get an OST.
One of the minuses about OST, is that in a lot of cases all of the game music is not included on the Disc. Instead they take the music, they think is most popular, and put it on the disc. A lot of OST are also concept Disc. Meaning, instead of hearing the in-game music, a lot of the tracks are cut-scenes from the game with speech.
On the plus side, the game music on OST are usually enhanced to sound slightly better then what you hear on the game disc. This is especially true when it comes to RPG OST’s.
Gamerips if done right, not only sound just as good as OST’s, they also include all the game music, and in some cases music that’s not used in the game, but is hidden on the Disc.
If I had to choose, I would go for Gamerips over OST’s. I only go for OST’s when I know all the in-game music is on the disc. Fortunately, a little over 50% of OST’s do include all the in-game music.
That’s what I sometimes have problems with OST’s. SOMEONE puts in the OST the music HE thinks is the best or most popular. Mostly they miss the song I like the most 🙂
no joke..they seem to overlook a lot of good tracks on osts because of time/space
Yeah it seems that the western gamemakers don’t see the opportunity that lies here…
Anyway, you people like it more when you download a rip or do you have more confidence in yourself and do it rather yourself?
Anyway, you people like it more when you download a rip or do you have more confidence in yourself and do it rather yourself?
For me it depends again.
I have the ability to rip my own game music and convert it to any audio format I want. However, if someone kindly does it for me, then I’d be a fool not to take advantage of their kindness.
I only rip when there’s a soundtrack I want, but I can’t find it anywhere, or when I want to share my own work with fellow game music fans.
Then you get a soundtrack release like Street Fighter III 3rd Strike which merges stage variations together while omitting others. Like Yun & Yang’s music omits their stage 2 music and merges 1 and 3 together. The gamerip, on the other hand, ends up having every individual stage 1-2-3 tracks. Yet the mixing in the ost still ends up good anyways, and it’s a variation the gamerip doesn’t give you (unless you mix it yourself).
Then again, sometimes an ost can get bonus remixes you won’t hear on a gamerip.
As it’s been also already said, gamerips are good for games which do not get osts. The Rosenkreuzstillette gamerip is passable (loud silence and tiny pops), but since an ost does not exist, it makes it that much better anyways.
If you start to take every OST and every Gamerips floatting around, you can count space in "Tb", really. (and that means like 2 or 3 hard drives..)
Yeah, that’s for sure the best way to go if there was not a tiny little problem…:
I’d say the main concern is hard drive space in fact…
If you start to take every OST and every Gamerips floatting around, you can count space in "Tb", really. (and that means like 2 or 3 hard drives..)
I don’t have such a problem as of 80gb music I have, only about 17gb is music from games (OSTs and GR). As I got 240gb space there is no problem. But I am not a real collector, who tries to get everything I can. Guess some of you have TB of music from games…
If the files ripped from the disc can be converted to ogg/mp3, i prefer that method.
That’s not always true – Enter the Matrix is one, and the Path of Neo got a sort-of release (2 tracks, though) in Juno Reactor’s "Gods and Monsters" album.
I have a 240GB HDD too, and I already have about 100GB of VGM music, and still haven’t got all I want. >_>
I’ll soon get me an external Harddrive with at least 250GB (if not 500 or 700), and store all of my VGM there.
I don’t try to get everything I can, as well, but I would like to get more than what I already have. And I’m close to my limitation already.