I just finished fate zero and decided to try tsukihime, I have the game working except the only sound that plays are the sound effects, like the clock when he wakes up in the hospital. is the game just lacking in sound or is the game not working?
I just finished fate zero and decided to try tsukihime, I have the game working except the only sound that plays are the sound effects, like the clock when he wakes up in the hospital. is the game just lacking in sound or is the game not working?
There should be music. Though there isn't any voice-acting.
Linger: Complete. August, 1995. I met him. A branch off Part 3. Mikiya keeps his promise to meet Azaka, and meets again with that mysterious girl he once found in the rain.
Shinkai: Set in the Edo period. DHO-centric. As mysterious figures gather in the city, a young woman unearths the dark secrets of the Asakami family.
The Dollkeeper: A Fate side-story. The memoirs of the last tuner of the Einzberns. A record of the end of a family.
Overcount 2030: Extra x Notes. A girl with no memories is found by a nameless soldier, and wakes up to a world of war.
oh i can live without music, unless the soundtrack is a must-listen. So unless there is an easy fix i'll probly just leave it be
The Tsukihime soundtrack is pretty small. There are some nice tracks that work well with the scenes they're meant for but by the time you've read through two routes you'll probably be utterly sick of the music's repetitiveness, which comes with the limited number of tracks.
thanks for the quick responses everyone
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also is there any way to make it fullscreen?
Not that I can remember but it's been ages since I last read it. I think some guys re-read it recently though so when they see the thread maybe they'll know. Pretty sure the answer is no though.
I've also realized that sometimes the music is gone after my game is loaded (and occasionally the blood screen filter also sticks throughout). To fix i started new game and fast-forwarded to last read location. (cntrl btn)
Get on with it, I might have better things to do.
*Checks schedule*
ah, dammit....
Did you rip and convert the tracks from the CD?
From the Mirror Moon patch Readme file:
"7. The In-Game Music
Tsukihime uses CD-DA for its music, meaning that the music
is plainly stored on the CD and playable on your stereo CD
player. In the English version, we set up ONScripter to
use mp3 or ogg music instead of CD-DA, for two reasons.
First of all, the current builds of ONScripter don't handle
playing CD-DA very well. Second, there are alternative
musical arrangements for Tsukihime that greatly improve the
playing experience.
The effect is that you will have to rip your CD-DA music to
mp3 or ogg before you start playing. Because of many
problems with ONScripter freezing because of badly encoded
mp3 files, we recommend using ogg files instead.
For ripping CD-DA to ogg files, we recommend using CDex:
http://cdexos.sourceforge.net/
After you download and install it, click Options / Settings
and under the tab 'Filenames' select an output directory
for your music files. Then select the drive where your CD
is located under the 'CD Drive' tab.
Next, go to the Encoder tab and choose the Ogg Vorbis DLL
Encoder as your encoder. Click OK, select all audio tracks
and click Convert / Extract CD Track(s) to a Compressed
Audio File.
Once you have converted your CD-DA music to ogg, rename the
files to 'track01.ogg' through 'track10.ogg' and move them
to the subdirectory called 'CD' in your game directory.
Remember to delete your mp3 files if you used mp3 music in
a prior version of Tsukihime English.
Note that if your windows is hiding known file extensions
(this is the case if the files you ripped from the CD are
shown without an ogg extension in explorer), you should not
rename the files to track01.ogg through track10.ogg but
simply to track01 through track10 .
The original Tsukihime music is not of very high quality,
and will get extremely boring if you listen to it for a
longer period of time. Because Tsukihime is quite long, we
recommend using one of the following rearrangements of the
Tsukihime game music:
EVER AFTER - music from "Tsukihime" REPRODUCTION
Catalog Number: TMC-1003 or 1004 (Limited Edition)
The first nine tracks of this CD are revamped versions of
the first nine music tracks of Tsukihime. The tenth track
of Tsukihime is not available on this disc. The CD can be
bought at Amazon:
http://www.amazon.co.jp/gp/switch-language/product
/B0001927TM?language=en%5FJP
Be sure to copy both parts of the URL into your browser's
address bar.
TsukiBako version of Tsukihime
TsukiBako was a compilation release containing Tsukihime,
Tsukihime PLUS+DISC and Kagetsu Tohya. Whereas the music
on EVER AFTER could be considered a remix, the music
tracks on this CD are the same as in the original game,
only with improved sample quality.
Note that it will probably be much more difficult to find
TsukiBako than it will be to obtain EVER AFTER. Both CDs
offer equally good music, it depends on personal preference
which one could be considered the best choice. To use these
arrangements, simply encode them to ogg and install them
as described above."
"Do you want some____________?"
oh i can live without music, unless the soundtrack is a must-listen. So unless there is an easy fix i'll probly just leave it be
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