Return Styles: Pseud0ch, Terminal, Valhalla, NES, Geocities, Blue Moon.

Pages: 1-

Katamari Damacy Music

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-11 21:49

I absolutely love the music for this game! I was wondering if anyone here knows of a website I can download the mp3s of the songs from. Not a torrent, direct downloads please. I've tried google with no sucess, I implore you for help!

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-14 11:49 (sage)

You silly thing.

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-19 5:51

It's.. illegal?

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-19 8:52

>>3
It's legal in Canada.

Name: Anonymous 2005-10-26 23:19

*clears throat*
Erhem...Limewire. Not saying I did or anything!...

Name: Nekomi 2005-11-02 13:34

o.o' wow......illegal in canada?...that must suck XP

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-02 17:21

There should be a music player("OrgView") on the same page you downloaded the game from. After that you can use any sound recording program, such as Audacity, to record the sound as you listen to it.

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-02 18:38

Oh crap, I fail at reading, for some reason I thought Cave Story...

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-10 13:59

Google it. Super easy to find.

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-10 17:36

Direct downloads are for suckers.

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-12 17:39

>>wikipedia
Today's featured article
The front cover art of Katamari Damacy

Katamari Damacy is a Japanese video game designed by Keita Takahashi and published by Namco. The game's plot concerns a tiny Prince on a mission to rebuild the stars, constellations and Moon, which his father, the King of All Cosmos, has accidentally destroyed. This is achieved by rolling a magical sticky ball called a katamari around various locations, collecting increasingly large objects, ranging from thumbtacks to schoolchildren to mountains, until the ball has grown large enough to form a star. The game falls under both the puzzle and action game genres, since strategy as well as dexterity are needed to complete a mission. Katamari Damacy's story, characters and settings are bizarre and heavily stylized, rarely attempting any semblance of realism. The game's simple controls and colorful, blocky graphics make it superficially appear to be targeted towards a young audience, but its quirky humor, innovative gameplay and surreal setting have attracted the attention of gamers of all ages.

Recently featured: Peterborough Chronicle – Dogpatch USA – Robert Arthur Lawson

>>1
relevant?

Name: Anonymous 2005-11-12 22:03

>>6

4 said it was LEGAL in canada. =_=

Don't change these.
Name: Email:
Entire Thread Thread List