The 20 Best Songs in Videogames
Image assets: Jon 'ShakataGaNai' Davis and Joan | Wikimedia.orgThe first commercial videogame involved navigating a rocket ship; it was created by Nolan Bushnell and Ted Dabney in 1971. Music has been around for um… a lot longer than that. But the two have been intertwined from the nearly the beginning of gaming, as far back as Atari 2600, which allowed gamers to play alongside background “music,” which was really a series of simple loops.
The quality of the sound wasn’t exactly wonderful. Early systems had a very finite amount of space, which severely limited the options for sound engineers and producers. As technology advanced, sound got more advanced as well. The only constrictions for sound engineers became their imaginations.
But it wasn’t until gaming-system technology sufficiently advanced that games finally began incorporating full songs into games. No longer were the blips and bleeps the only ingredients. Now everything from synthesized violins to bongos can take their rightful places in the gaming pantheon as large contributors to musical scores.
Game developers, producers, and publishers recognized the public’s growing interest in game music. Virtually every gamer knows the Halo theme, and many mainstream people probably do too, even if they don’t know from where the song originates. People can buy gaming soundtracks at places like Amazon.com and Best Buy after such stores realized how much of the public wished to listen to soundtracks on their own time, wherever they liked, instead of being relegated to a television or computer screen.
Gaming’s core demographic includes a substantial percentage of the younger generation and increasingly large parts of the previous generations, so marketing companies began tailoring soundtracks to specific ages. You likely won’t come across too many Frank Sinatra or other big band-era groups unless the songs fit the game’s era (e.g. Rockstar’s Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, which has music that is a gigantic hit with those who grew up during the ‘80s or even have a recollection of pop music from that time).
The approach of including songs that fit the game as opposed to the demographic has become more popular as time passes, as evidenced by BioShock’s numerous period pieces. And thankfully, some developers and producers have great taste in music; that taste is exhibited in the choices below.