I'll bet £10 that every one of those sites runs google analytics, or google syndication or both. If I were you, I'd be far more worried about the trackers and cookies that 'data sharing sites' store on your drive, and the information they read, and retain about you than a file on a direct *nix path with no HTML or scripts running, at all. You aren't transmitting anything, so SSL is effectively irrelevant. If you're unable to decipher what an expired SSL cert means, for a file like this, then that's hardly my problem. I'm certainly not going to send it over Skype.
#Zelda sound effects free#
I'm not going to place it elsewhere, but feel free to do so, if you are so inclined. Might I suggest that you either place it on a different site, or offer to send it to members who want it via a more secure medium like Skype?
![zelda sound effects zelda sound effects](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/44/ec/b8/44ecb8922c619d8c3e68434474154fa4.jpg)
The other site mentioned earlier is the one I generally use now to find sound effects I don't have, though it does have some strange omissions. I know that you're against those corporate storage sites, ZoriaRPG but at least they don't create warnings like this. While I'd like to have something like this myself, I don't want it that badly.
#Zelda sound effects series#
Zelda music might be some of the most memorable in the industry, but the soundtracks of The Legend of Zelda series proves inspiration can come from bizarre and unexpected places.Even trying to click on that link gets my browser to say that the connection is not secure and the site might be trying to steal my secure data like passwords. Even Twilight Princess used commercial sound effects the chimes in the background of the Twilight theme come from the PowerFX New World Order 2 library.
![zelda sound effects zelda sound effects](https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/soundeffects/images/2/2d/Skyward_Sword_Box_Art.jpg)
For example, the HCS Forum community attributed one of the voices in the background of Majora's Mask's Woodfall Temple theme to a sample from the Zero G Ethnic Flavors library. Like the Shadow Temple theme, this part of the track sounds so similar to the sample that it's hard to hear the difference. It's strange to think the focal point of the track, in a way, wasn't created by Nintendo.Īside from Ocarina of Time's songs, other Zelda music also pulled audio samples from sound libraries in a similar fashion. The Shadow Temple's version of the sample is slowed and occasionally fades in and out, but the basic beat was hardly altered at all, and Kondo's composition consists mostly of extra noises layered on top to complement it. While some samples were significantly altered from their original forms, some, like the bongos in the background of the Shadow Temple theme, sound remarkably similar to their sources. The GameTrailers video above includes almost five minutes of similar examples, comparing Zelda music to its sound sources. Even the gastrointestinal noises in the Inside Jabu-Jabu's Belly dungeon started as a sample from one of these libraries. Similarly, the " boing" sound in the Goron City theme is also a sample, " Per_co14," from the same library. Kondo added reverb and altered the sound's pitch to create the catchy beat Zelda fans know and love today. How Zelda Music Used Third-Party Sound Samples It's a simple sample, yet composer Koji Kondo's creative use of the sound is part of what gives the Water Temple theme its mysterious and aquatic atmosphere. For example, the background melody of Ocarina's Water Temple theme appears to be composed entirely of a single sample - " Pad 36 C4," from the Best Service Gigapack sound library - played at different pitches.
![zelda sound effects zelda sound effects](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/XWGn1Z4LanI/maxresdefault.jpg)
Related: How Nintendo Censored Ocarina Of Time's 3DS RemakeĪs reported by GameTrailers, many of the samples used in Ocarina of Time's music were discovered by members of the HCS Forum community. However, the Fire Temple theme is far from the only Zelda song that includes samples from commercial sound libraries. The chants appeared in certain early prints of Ocarina of Time cartridges, but Nintendo removed them in subsequent runs, likely to mitigate potential controversy. The most well-known example of this sampling is the Islamic chanting heard in the original version of Ocarina's Fire Temple theme. But fans of Ocarina of Time's legendary soundtrack might be surprised to learn some of its most iconic sounds were sampled from commercial sound libraries. The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 's soundtrack is evidence enough that Nintendo spares no expense when it comes to hiring its composers. A major part of the lasting popularity of Nintendo games is the studio's incredible library of music.