Fun Fact: This music plays at the "Our Bodies: The Universe Within" exhibit in Orlando, Florida. No, this is not an ad. It seriously plays there, I was dumbfounded when I recognized it.
@@Antifurryguy-i7w Calling the world from isolation 'Cause right now, that's the ball where we be chained And if you're coming back to find me You'd better have good aim Shoot it true I need you in the picture That's why I'm calling you (calling you) I'm the lonely twin, the left hand Reset myself and get back on track I don't want this isolation See the state I'm in now? Callin' the hunter with a rifle 'Cause right now that's the ball where we be chained Shoot it true I want you in the picture That's why I'm calling you (calling you) I'm the lonely twin, the left hand Reset myself and get back on track I don't want this isolation See the state I'm in now? If I pick it up when I know that it's broken Do I put it back? Or do I head out on to the lonesome trail and let you down? I'm the lonely twin, the left hand I don't want this isolation See the state I'm in now? If I pick it up when I know that it's broken Do I put it back? Or do I head out on to the lonesome trail and let you go?
I've been watching some of your Pathologic videos for some time now. Imagine how shocked I was when I saw this comment! Let me tell you: you have a great taste in music and video games.
This might just be heaven. Enjoy what life we have & continue to listen to this track. Given how things are going now, I can accept this as heaven at the moment
man. i remember going into vault 21 and hearing this you hear the gamblers laughter in the background and general talking. really just hit me hard. made me look on my childhood. all my good memories with my grandparents. i absolutely love this song and i love fallout. we don’t deserve this level of beauty.
I live near Sacramento but have grandparents who own a winery near Redding. Each time my family drives there up I-5, I hum the Highwayman theme and when I'm chilling on their porch I look towards the direction of Mount Shasta and mount Lassen and play this theme on my phone. Fallout is life.
What a world of difference between this masterpiece and Fallout 3 music. Wish Mark Morgan did it, don't know why they wouldn't accept him for the job. Its not supposed to be bright and cheery music in a nuclear wasteland.
It was a dying village, but I came up with the best solution to them, worked a treaty between them and the Ghost Village and got Johnny back home. To be honest, I didn't do that much but to them, it meant the difference between dying out and thriving. I can only hope the future was bright for them.
@@thechosenundead2718 I second this. But i also think it fits as gomorrah is kind of a 'dream town' for some people. When you are down on your luck, some people will drink, some gamble, enjoy sexy things in a way. It kind of makes sense as its a place of despair and old world greed to mix with human nature. I went a little overboard with the explanation as you can tell, but either way, gomorrah is interesting in how modoc plays there since both are representations of dying morality.
The first two Fallout games prove that you don't need insane graphical fidelity with particle effects and god rays to create a convincing world. You need sound design first and foremost. These games have incredibly simple and rudimentary graphics but still have a stronger atmosphere than most games today. Mark Morgan is a fucking genius. No better ambient soundtrack in the history of video games as far as I'm concerned. Even the same songs played in New Vegas somehow feel out of place. It's like they were meant to be with the original game's graphics style.
I know its your opinion but its weird that you put F2 ahead Yet F3 ahead of FNV and F1, like what are your considerations? lol For me FNV > F2 > F1 > F3, FNV to me will always be the true F3 and it was just dripping in good writting and philosophy, dam spent hours listening to the people talk in that game.
Man this song gives me so much nostalgia. I listen to it and then disappear for months or years and everytime I turn it on again I get this tingling feeling in my chest. Its so hard to explain its like the same feeling when you spend time with people or your other that you truly love. Everytime I have felt unrest and hopeless this song provides some refuge and comfort.
This music is just beautiful. Maybe the most beautiful and peaceful I have ever heard. Don't know how I never heard it in any fallout before. I played 1, 2 and New Vegas through. Don't remember Modoc... Maybe because it has been so long since I played it. I was listening to the Vault Archives and am so glad to have found this one... :)
Modoc is an easy place to breeze through if you run right to Vault City after going to The Den. It can be easily ignored, but is a good place to stop off and just rest and trade.
I remember finding this town when playing fallout 2, I was so used to the desolate and bleak sounds and scenes of fallout 1 that when I heard this piece upon entry I was overcome with a total sense of hope and comfort, truly a great moment.
makes me remeber the old fallouts, being run on the old pcs, when mouse was noisy and keyboard was without backlid and with huge keys. The power of CRT monitors were so powerfull that they would turn blackman white in the matter of minutes. Windows were being sold on 100+ disquettes. Cheats and game guides were printed on paper in game magz with free games. Games needed proper separate cracking ( instead of out of win registry standalones you get from torrents these days ). Vodoo graphics were top of the line and radeon was only for level10+ computer guru who knew how to repatch or edit drivers for that card. Sometimes I can still smell that cheap plastic and hear noisy fans, and smell the hot summer grass through the open window ...
Модок всегда был моей любимой локацией во втором Фолыче. Одно из немногих мест, где можно забыть, что находишься на руинах Старого мира. Небольшой мирный городок, где не придётся бороться за жизнь каждую минуту, а квесты чего стоят: поиск наручных часов с ну очень неожиданным финалом (олды поймут), ферма с привидениями, секрет божественного вкуса омлета хозяйки салуна, возможность встрять в свадьбу по залёту... Да, хорошая локация, чтоб отдохнуть от суровой Пустоши перед дальнейшими приключениями.
I won't lie, I hated the humour in FO2. A bunch of random people wandering around an area going "waka waka waka waka waka" isn't all that funny to me, just immersion breaking.
@Big Retard Yeah, it's so sad to sit as a diehard Fallout fan knowing that they sit with an iron grip on the 'canon' of this series. It's actually a great loss and a cultural scandal. I played out every single inch of fo3+exp, they hype of having brought fallout into a new dimension was huge. I think the only true comparison would be GTA2->3 and Mario64. I thought they did a lot of things right in that game, fo3. But Fallout 4 sucked major horse penis. I pray it can one day find its way back in the hands of Chris Avellone.
@@SyndicateOperative yeah I agree - Fallout 2 goes a bit overboard with the referential humor sometimes. It occasionally feels more like a Borderlands game than a Fallout game in terms of writing and humor. Fallout 1 struck the perfect balance of humor and seriousness.
Guys you can’t even imagine how much time I spent searching for this sound! I was playing fallout nv and this came out. I instantly fell in love and I started searching on the net for it. I thought it was new Vegas track that’s why I couldn’t find it! I’m a producer of ambient trap and I’m definitely going to use this sample!
This track gives me memories I never had. I imigine a lonely farm in a middle of nowhere, surrounded but just fields. It's dawn and you standing there on your porch of your little farm house looking over your crops. Modoc would be definitely the place where I would ended up after the events if F2
The intro of the first Fallout showed how the world was in a very bad state. Gas was inflated terribly, US annexed/ publicly executed Canadians, and resources were low all around.
This song is my "Depression Sponge" If I'm feeling depressed I'll put this on, look up at the stars/stand in the rain, and just be for a few minutes. Clears my head right up.
An amazing track; makes you feel as if there might be some peace in the Wasteland after all. I too was pleasantly surprised when I heard this song in New Vegas; first heard it in Ranger Andy's bungalow in that game.
In the unlikely event that a Fallout film is ever made, I would hope that this piece (among several others) makes it into the finished product. At least a nod. Honestly, this one is one of my favorites from any of the Fallout games, and I think it'd make be a great choice for the trailer.
Geoffrey Futch There was going to be a Fallout film back in… I dunno, 2000? It was canceled, and I don't see Bethesda ever making something like that without nods towards the Elder Scrolls, like the sweetroll jokes.
TheBreakingBenny -- I had no idea if such a film were ever actually planned. It's just something I'd love to see. Perhaps at this point, it's the sort of thing that might happen as a fan-fueled project, indie film sort of thing. Not sure how much latitude they'd have without Bethesda's blessing, but I'd love to see it done.
+TheBreakingBenny unless they see how profitable it is with Ubisoft Studios (with Assassin's Creed / Splinter Cell flicks for next year) and they finally launch their own studios
+Geoff Futch there was gonna be a fallout movie, but it never went through, luckily. the ideas they had in mind were genuine shit, like cliche af stuff
I remember hearing this in a specific place in the desert in new vegas and it just awe stuck me I just heard it in fallout 2 and the same reaction it just sounds so serene and beautiful like a well-deserved rest from the scary things in the apocalypse i love this song
I have played the first two Fallout, but i first heard this song in fallout New Vegas under Lake Nelson? in the completely underwater cave. I would spend a lot of time down there staring at the shimmering lights seeping through the cracks and slipping into the dark waters among the softly glowing plants. It was exhilarating.
This song played the other day when i was playing Fallout Online: Reloaded. I was venturing out with a friend, searching for caves to enter and gather loot from, when we got into an unavoidable encounter against some deathclaws and the shootout began. I began firing my LSW at them, killing them one by one while my friend used his M60 to help me kill them. My friend's eyes were damaged from an attack and he could no longer see well, so i told him to stay away from them while i killed them all. He began to move around the map, getting the deathclaws to follow him while i shot them from a distance with "burst" attacks, eventually killing them all. When all the deathclaws died and the shootout ended, i just stood there for like 12 seconds, listening to this song, staring at all those dead deathclaws while my friend was calling out my name and telling me that we had survived the encounter but that he didn't have any ammo left for his M60.
I've never played Fallout 2, but I can understand what this track was trying to achieve. Many towns share the same fate as Modoc, and Modoc will be added to that list. But you get to see it in real time, and witness its last dying breath while walking through its streets, and it can't help but remind you of your home arroyo. And even without the Enclave's growing presence, if something doesn't change for the better in the wasteland, then it will share the same fate as Modoc. It will be swallowed by oblivion, withered by the ravages of time. This is the fate of Arroyo should the Chosen One fail: A slow death of a rotting civilization.
I once heard an edit with this song playing in the background of the master resizing that everything he had done was for nothing, and it was honestly one of the best edits of anything I've ever seen.
I feel like this song represents the fall of society as we know it. The one thing that run through my head when I first heard this song (in Vault 21) is that people came to the vaults from their homes and never saw daylight again. It's weird, I feel regret and sadness when I hear this but I want to keep listening.
It would have to be surreal knowing that multiple generations have lived in an advanced underground shelter, never seeing the light of day. Even the elders' grandparents would have had a tough time remembering what the surface looked like before the Great War, of what wind blowing leaves sounded like, the fragrance of fresh air and having a home with a family. In this song, there is the feeling of melancholy and distant, faded, dreams, surfacing and submerging. No matter what the dreams may have been, they are always just out of reach, and time ticks onward, apathetic to the desires of mortals.
I honestly felt like this could also encompass a sense of closure. Of being satisfied with one's lot in life, and willing to pass on. Essentially, the sound of Nirvana, almost.
I think you don't realize how fucked our country is, and Trump won't stand for what you want. He's a business man, willing to sell anything to make a buck.
"After the oil rig explodes, you are alone, Navarro become annexed by the NCR, your superiors disappear, the other into the mojave and no way to go now, you found peace in the wasteland, but feel do many things so wrong"
That could have been a sweet plot hook for a Black-Isle developed Fallout 3 - you're an ex-enclave soldier who's done heinous shit in their lifetime and are looking for a fresh start. Will you turn over a new leaf, or hold onto the dying flame of the past? Will you seek redemption, or continue your destructive tendencies?
Ah, memories when I did having a hard time killing enemies since my weapon was only a spear. After exploring some places, I found Modoc. I saw the trader that he sells bullets and no gun. Checking his inventory has a shotgun, coins and some shells, no choice but I had to steal it. After that he caught me and I had to fight him. Then the other guys rushed on me and I killed those, very sad but it was the best moment of my gameplay.
I played this track when i finally found Randall Clark's body in Honest Hearts one summer evening after a rough day and damn the vibe hits like a nuke into the Long 15. it was simply glorious
This OST plays at the end of the Alice Hostetler quest in New Vegas. I got the ending where I convinced her to stay home and I didn't accept the reward. There are multiple possible endings, including one where she commits suicide in front of you. Regardless, you really feel sorry for her and this theme song fits perfectly. People have to grow up even in the post apocalyptic wasteland. Only now there are no therapists or teachers or clergymen or youth counselors. An interesting side quest for sure.
*** SPOILERS *** I love this theme, and love the fact that Modoc later prospers. This music in the beginning sounded melancholic and almost desperate, but when I saw the good ending of Modoc it now brings me hope.
I am currently playing fallout 2 for the first time, and this theme feels so out of place, yet so fitting at the same time. I stumbled upon this town while making my way back to the den from vault city to get my highwayman, and now I just want to spend some more time listening to this track. Hope it plays somewhere else as well.
i did that same thing but i was in novac in one of the hotel rooms.. i just sat there and let the camera pan forever.. totally blown away.. its so nostalgic and melancholy
I love this piece of music, I was just totally captivated by it, such a sudden change in atmosphere, the first time I reached Modoc and just sat there listening to it, mesmerized.
You can hear this theme in New Vegas. It can play sometimes near a shack that's at the shore of Lake Mead, the Fisherman's Pride Shack, not much distance east from Camp Golf.
All these people talking about fallout 2 but I heard this in the honest hearts dlc. I was on the east part of Zion when I was with Joshua Graham on the final quest. It was night time and since the made skybox was more clear to see more stars it made the experience way better and realistic
Whenever I hear this song, I can see a person, beat up by the apocalyptic world, take a view into the old world. Peace, tranquility, blissful silence. Seeing kids in clean clothes run up and down a smooth street in a perfect neighborhood. To see the blue sky, and the white clouds.
Very Brian Eno-esque. They definitely took heavy influence from him. really sets the dreary & hopeless tune of Modoc. This song really coveys the hopeless feeling of the apocalypse.
A lone and bygone wanderer, amidst an empty and vast wasteland, roaming in search for something, yearning, searching restlessly, as he looks into the far distance of this now hollowed world, he lied down onto the ground, finally at peace with himself, here at the end of all things and looked up to the everlasting blue skies, his last desire.
my dad died and this feels like a depression sponge. thank you
I hope you're doing well, friend.
Sorry for your loss even 5 months later
Sorry for your loss. Much love and courage to you friend.
My mom died a week ago, I know how It feels, friend.
Fun Fact: This music plays at the "Our Bodies: The Universe Within" exhibit in Orlando, Florida.
No, this is not an ad. It seriously plays there, I was dumbfounded when I recognized it.
Really? Thats crazy
Shame I'm in Australia I would of liked to have experienced it :(
Ah yeah, going to give that place a vist
@@Rookie-2552 if you got thee money visit and see Orlando and all the gulf coast
@@diablodelatorre negative covid and being poor due to being a uni student nullifies chances of doing that 😭
- Greetings, traveler! Name is Cornelius; I run this place.
- Then why it's called "ROSE's Bed & Breakfast"?
- Cuz she's my wife, dummy!
Gayyyyyyy
@@Antifurryguy-i7w
Calling the world from isolation
'Cause right now, that's the ball where we be chained
And if you're coming back to find me
You'd better have good aim
Shoot it true
I need you in the picture
That's why I'm calling you (calling you)
I'm the lonely twin, the left hand
Reset myself and get back on track
I don't want this isolation
See the state I'm in now?
Callin' the hunter with a rifle
'Cause right now that's the ball where we be chained
Shoot it true
I want you in the picture
That's why I'm calling you (calling you)
I'm the lonely twin, the left hand
Reset myself and get back on track
I don't want this isolation
See the state I'm in now?
If I pick it up when I know that it's broken
Do I put it back?
Or do I head out on to the lonesome trail and let you down?
I'm the lonely twin, the left hand
I don't want this isolation
See the state I'm in now?
If I pick it up when I know that it's broken
Do I put it back?
Or do I head out on to the lonesome trail and let you go?
A beautiful, desolate game even today. Truly timeless and some of gaming's greatest.
I've been watching some of your Pathologic videos for some time now. Imagine how shocked I was when I saw this comment!
Let me tell you: you have a great taste in music and video games.
@@manuelgomez4595 Thank you very much! It seems you do as well.
I hope I hear this when I'm in heaven
When the tine will come......you will
This might just be heaven. Enjoy what life we have & continue to listen to this track.
Given how things are going now, I can accept this as heaven at the moment
This song is truly peaceful. I always think of it when I remember the past - I like nostalgia and this song helps improve that feeling.
With accepting Jesus Christ as Lord, you will.
@@unkownoflife5959 Amen 🙏
I heard this track while swimming through a cave in New Vegas and it was pretty damn cool.
both games have great ambient tracks.
man. i remember going into vault 21 and hearing this you hear the gamblers laughter in the background and general talking. really just hit me hard. made me look on my childhood. all my good memories with my grandparents. i absolutely love this song and i love fallout. we don’t deserve this level of beauty.
Man, im glad there is another person who have the same thoughts about that, Vault 21 is surely a lovely place even with its tragic story.
Agreed. This music adds a deepness to fallout. As if it already isn’t deep enough. I sure do love fallout.
Didn't know benson was such a fallout fan
It’s music like this that convinces you to be a good guy
“We killed everyone ,even the children” that line made me start a new game
I live near Sacramento but have grandparents who own a winery near Redding. Each time my family drives there up I-5, I hum the Highwayman theme and when I'm chilling on their porch I look towards the direction of Mount Shasta and mount Lassen and play this theme on my phone.
Fallout is life.
Would love to feel what its like to be on that porch with you that kind of nights :)
Oh, you are lucky man :-) You must visit Klamath Falls and Reno too.
Did you mean Sac city.
I don't suppose you're talking about Anselmo Vineyards? If so I used to work there
>Fallout is life
I listen to 1&2 ost all the time
Perfect theme for a dying village, which Modoc really was.
impaledimpaled Your comment captured my thoughts on the song, word for word o.O
Superwolf1337 thx bro :)
Perfect theme for a village covered in feces.
What a world of difference between this masterpiece and Fallout 3 music. Wish Mark Morgan did it, don't know why they wouldn't accept him for the job. Its not supposed to be bright and cheery music in a nuclear wasteland.
It was a dying village, but I came up with the best solution to them, worked a treaty between them and the Ghost Village and got Johnny back home. To be honest, I didn't do that much but to them, it meant the difference between dying out and thriving. I can only hope the future was bright for them.
It really makes you feel like you are in a dream. Its calm and a bit creepy, it really sounds like fallout itself.
Feels almost like transcending through space in a dream, starry night..
it also feels exactly like the “vault archives” picture
This is by far the best track I have listened to in the fallout soundtracks.
This also plays after you complete Honest Hearts in Fallout New Vegas.
It plays in Gomorrah too, which is an odd choice for that place.
@@thechosenundead2718 I second this. But i also think it fits as gomorrah is kind of a 'dream town' for some people. When you are down on your luck, some people will drink, some gamble, enjoy sexy things in a way. It kind of makes sense as its a place of despair and old world greed to mix with human nature. I went a little overboard with the explanation as you can tell, but either way, gomorrah is interesting in how modoc plays there since both are representations of dying morality.
Fair enough. Something like the New Reno OST just seems more fitting. Or maybe I'm just an idiot and have no idea what I'm talking about 😂
TheTechCguy this also plays in vault 21
@@thechosenundead2718 Modoc is supposed to be a peaceful place, far from everything & far from the troubles of the world.
The nostalgia is powerful. Very grateful New Vegas had all this music from the old games.
this is truly beautiful without having the classic Fallout nostalgia tbh
@@timh.7169Sony VEGAS.
The first two Fallout games prove that you don't need insane graphical fidelity with particle effects and god rays to create a convincing world. You need sound design first and foremost. These games have incredibly simple and rudimentary graphics but still have a stronger atmosphere than most games today. Mark Morgan is a fucking genius. No better ambient soundtrack in the history of video games as far as I'm concerned.
Even the same songs played in New Vegas somehow feel out of place. It's like they were meant to be with the original game's graphics style.
Good writing helps too.
they have incredible graphics, bro. And it was very expensive at that times. And many people worked on it
Eldritch Augur Absolutely. The games is almost 22 years old and it’ll still completely transport you to another world.
I actually disagree. City of the Dead was perfect for Nipton.
@@peppermillers8361 agreed
"Okay then let's seal the deal. Cut off your right pinky finger"
ExsertZaid667 he does if u have high enough charisma
@@natedogg248 no matter what there's always a way, had no idea. always learning about these games.
THIS is why the first two fallout games are the best. I want to cry, but I can't because all things die and their memory fades.
I couldn't agree more
I love fallout 2
fallout new vegas is good aswell
How can you even mention Fallout 3 in the same phrase as the rest? And how in the fucking world do you find it better than NV and 1?
I know its your opinion but its weird that you put F2 ahead Yet F3 ahead of FNV and F1, like what are your considerations? lol
For me FNV > F2 > F1 > F3, FNV to me will always be the true F3 and it was just dripping in good writting and philosophy, dam spent hours listening to the people talk in that game.
To hear this in New Vegas again, sent shivers down my spine
Mark Morgan is a genius.
Man this song gives me so much nostalgia. I listen to it and then disappear for months or years and everytime I turn it on again I get this tingling feeling in my chest. Its so hard to explain its like the same feeling when you spend time with people or your other that you truly love. Everytime I have felt unrest and hopeless this song provides some refuge and comfort.
This music is just beautiful. Maybe the most beautiful and peaceful I have ever heard.
Don't know how I never heard it in any fallout before. I played 1, 2 and New Vegas through. Don't remember Modoc... Maybe because it has been so long since I played it.
I was listening to the Vault Archives and am so glad to have found this one... :)
Modoc is an easy place to breeze through if you run right to Vault City after going to The Den. It can be easily ignored, but is a good place to stop off and just rest and trade.
GrosserAndrew5000 It was in New Vegas too, it played a lot in Sarah Weintraub's Vault Hotel.
GrosserAndrew5000 Maaaan you missed the best omelet the wasteland can offer!
It's actually in a few different locations in New Vegas. I heard it in Vault 21, the armory in Lonesome Road, and the Gomorrah courtyard.
Still one of my favorite pieces of music I have ever heard.
"We are going to attack the slags in 2 days"
*"No but wait tho, I found karl, dont"*
I remember finding this town when playing fallout 2, I was so used to the desolate and bleak sounds and scenes of fallout 1 that when I heard this piece upon entry I was overcome with a total sense of hope and comfort, truly a great moment.
"This down is dying"
Chosen One: "Say no more.."
Sounds Very nice and peaceful, like heaven
Good comment, Kaiser Wilhelm II, last Emperor of Germany.
makes me remeber the old fallouts, being run on the old pcs, when mouse was noisy and keyboard was without backlid and with huge keys.
The power of CRT monitors were so powerfull that they would turn blackman white in the matter of minutes. Windows were being sold on 100+ disquettes. Cheats and game guides were printed on paper in game magz with free games. Games needed proper separate cracking ( instead of out of win registry standalones you get from torrents these days ). Vodoo graphics were top of the line and radeon was only for level10+ computer guru who knew how to repatch or edit drivers for that card.
Sometimes I can still smell that cheap plastic and hear noisy fans, and smell the hot summer grass through the open window ...
Beautiful memory fren. Thanks for sharing.
Fallout is life.
One of the best tracks in the whole series. Mark Morgan is a boss
Maybe not THE BEST, but certainly one of the best.
Mark Morgan is THE boss, bro.
Glad they used this track in Fallout: New Vegas.
Mioda really?! Where?
Khaja Azharuddin Siddiqui only certain places plays it. Like secret caches in lonesome road.
Uriel Septim Thanks. I'll be sure to send the Mythic Dawn to your place.
The followers of the apocalypse theme a.k.a
the Coyote Den and a ton of other places. You can check Nukapedia.
Модок всегда был моей любимой локацией во втором Фолыче. Одно из немногих мест, где можно забыть, что находишься на руинах Старого мира. Небольшой мирный городок, где не придётся бороться за жизнь каждую минуту, а квесты чего стоят: поиск наручных часов с ну очень неожиданным финалом (олды поймут), ферма с привидениями, секрет божественного вкуса омлета хозяйки салуна, возможность встрять в свадьбу по залёту...
Да, хорошая локация, чтоб отдохнуть от суровой Пустоши перед дальнейшими приключениями.
I miss Fallout 1 and 2 the unique quest and omg the humor
I love all fallout games because they all still hold that dark humor.
I won't lie, I hated the humour in FO2. A bunch of random people wandering around an area going "waka waka waka waka waka" isn't all that funny to me, just immersion breaking.
@Big Retard Yeah, it's so sad to sit as a diehard Fallout fan knowing that they sit with an iron grip on the 'canon' of this series. It's actually a great loss and a cultural scandal.
I played out every single inch of fo3+exp, they hype of having brought fallout into a new dimension was huge. I think the only true comparison would be GTA2->3 and Mario64. I thought they did a lot of things right in that game, fo3. But Fallout 4 sucked major horse penis.
I pray it can one day find its way back in the hands of Chris Avellone.
@@hm09235nd Avellone wont return to Obsidian as long as the upper management stay there
@@SyndicateOperative yeah I agree - Fallout 2 goes a bit overboard with the referential humor sometimes. It occasionally feels more like a Borderlands game than a Fallout game in terms of writing and humor. Fallout 1 struck the perfect balance of humor and seriousness.
Guys you can’t even imagine how much time I spent searching for this sound! I was playing fallout nv and this came out. I instantly fell in love and I started searching on the net for it. I thought it was new Vegas track that’s why I couldn’t find it!
I’m a producer of ambient trap and I’m definitely going to use this sample!
Such a beautiful track. Reminds me of when times were better.
This track gives me memories I never had. I imigine a lonely farm in a middle of nowhere, surrounded but just fields. It's dawn and you standing there on your porch of your little farm house looking over your crops.
Modoc would be definitely the place where I would ended up after the events if F2
black isle: hey mark, can you make a theme song for a cattle town that’s long-past its prime? it doesn’t have to go too hard.
mark morgan:
It wasn't even made for Fallout 2, it was from a previous game he worked on, Netstorm.
But damn, this track just fits in seamlessly
this is terrific. insanely atmospheric and beautiful... my holy fucking god...
I finally found this one. This one is my favorite of them all.
Sometimes I imagine pre war world of Fallout with that song ,Giant shiny cities full of happy people ,domestic robots and working factories.
Maybe in the 2050s... but before the bombs fell the world wasn't a happy place at all.
The intro of the first Fallout showed how the world was in a very bad state. Gas was inflated terribly, US annexed/ publicly executed Canadians, and resources were low all around.
@@VienQuitonm Ahem, did you hear anything about Alaska? Or China?
i will never play a fallout game as good as the originals
New Vegas exists
@@RE4PER and?
@@puhbrox It's as good as the originals.
This town is where I realised the Chosen One's village isn't the only place hit with drought
This song is my "Depression Sponge" If I'm feeling depressed I'll put this on, look up at the stars/stand in the rain, and just be for a few minutes. Clears my head right up.
The classic fallouts had a good vibe. Mark Morgan understood and knew what Fallout really was and is...
Yes, chosen one.
@@GalacticExplorer_Edits83my pfp isn’t the chosen one anymore unfortunately 😔
this is heavenly
one of my favorites. what a great game
God I love this. So much, memories. The feeling of like nostalgia from this track. The exploring feeling, the.. amazing
Музыка в игре шикарна.
+
An amazing track; makes you feel as if there might be some peace in the Wasteland after all. I too was pleasantly surprised when I heard this song in New Vegas; first heard it in Ranger Andy's bungalow in that game.
In the unlikely event that a Fallout film is ever made, I would hope that this piece (among several others) makes it into the finished product. At least a nod.
Honestly, this one is one of my favorites from any of the Fallout games, and I think it'd make be a great choice for the trailer.
Geoffrey Futch There was going to be a Fallout film back in… I dunno, 2000? It was canceled, and I don't see Bethesda ever making something like that without nods towards the Elder Scrolls, like the sweetroll jokes.
TheBreakingBenny -- I had no idea if such a film were ever actually planned. It's just something I'd love to see.
Perhaps at this point, it's the sort of thing that might happen as a fan-fueled project, indie film sort of thing. Not sure how much latitude they'd have without Bethesda's blessing, but I'd love to see it done.
+TheBreakingBenny unless they see how profitable it is with Ubisoft Studios (with Assassin's Creed / Splinter Cell flicks for next year) and they finally launch their own studios
+Geoff Futch there was gonna be a fallout movie, but it never went through, luckily. the ideas they had in mind were genuine shit, like cliche af stuff
Tyler Carias I wouldn't be surprised if that was to parody the clichés, but even then that would be suckass.
I remember hearing this in a specific place in the desert in new vegas and it just awe stuck me I just heard it in fallout 2 and the same reaction
it just sounds so serene and beautiful like a well-deserved rest from the scary things in the apocalypse i love this song
Fallout franchise is imperishable masterpiece, including all of the soundracks!
Yes it is thats why I hope Bethesda nails it with fallout 5 make it more like new vegas and fallout 3
@@nneryfjiisdfgyyk4061 they won't. its better for them to not even touch this franchise anymore, all they care about now is money
I have played the first two Fallout, but i first heard this song in fallout New Vegas under Lake Nelson? in the completely underwater cave. I would spend a lot of time down there staring at the shimmering lights seeping through the cracks and slipping into the dark waters among the softly glowing plants. It was exhilarating.
John Wenzel It plays in Vault 21 also I think
Same
Do you mean Lake Mead?
The wasteland. A sad and desolate place with remains of a world long gone, but with new life still finding their way.
This song played the other day when i was playing Fallout Online: Reloaded.
I was venturing out with a friend, searching for caves to enter and gather loot from, when we got into an unavoidable encounter against some deathclaws and the shootout began.
I began firing my LSW at them, killing them one by one while my friend used his M60 to help me kill them.
My friend's eyes were damaged from an attack and he could no longer see well, so i told him to stay away from them while i killed them all.
He began to move around the map, getting the deathclaws to follow him while i shot them from a distance with "burst" attacks, eventually killing them all.
When all the deathclaws died and the shootout ended, i just stood there for like 12 seconds, listening to this song, staring at all those dead deathclaws while my friend was calling out my name and telling me that we had survived the encounter but that he didn't have any ammo left for his M60.
I slept to this song once while on loop and woke up feeling refreshed. Its that peaceful. ❤❤
Not sure if this is my favourite fallout 2 track.... but recently its the one I seem to come back to the most
sounds sad and enduring at the same time
I've never played Fallout 2, but I can understand what this track was trying to achieve.
Many towns share the same fate as Modoc, and Modoc will be added to that list. But you get to see it in real time, and witness its last dying breath while walking through its streets, and it can't help but remind you of your home arroyo. And even without the Enclave's growing presence, if something doesn't change for the better in the wasteland, then it will share the same fate as Modoc. It will be swallowed by oblivion, withered by the ravages of time.
This is the fate of Arroyo should the Chosen One fail: A slow death of a rotting civilization.
i heard this song in my dream today. haven't played fallout in a while, but still remembered it vividly.
This soundtrack is so euphoric
I once heard an edit with this song playing in the background of the master resizing that everything he had done was for nothing, and it was honestly one of the best edits of anything I've ever seen.
been looking for this song for so long
TheAmazingRusski Same.
I feel like this song represents the fall of society as we know it. The one thing that run through my head when I first heard this song (in Vault 21) is that people came to the vaults from their homes and never saw daylight again. It's weird, I feel regret and sadness when I hear this but I want to keep listening.
It would have to be surreal knowing that multiple generations have lived in an advanced underground shelter, never seeing the light of day. Even the elders' grandparents would have had a tough time remembering what the surface looked like before the Great War, of what wind blowing leaves sounded like, the fragrance of fresh air and having a home with a family.
In this song, there is the feeling of melancholy and distant, faded, dreams, surfacing and submerging. No matter what the dreams may have been, they are always just out of reach, and time ticks onward, apathetic to the desires of mortals.
I honestly felt like this could also encompass a sense of closure. Of being satisfied with one's lot in life, and willing to pass on.
Essentially, the sound of Nirvana, almost.
Fallout 2 and new vegas will always be my favorite games of all time oh and warcraft 3
This song really earned its name
This is truly beautiful music
this song's title fits so well. all i do is day dream while listening to this.
This song makes me thing of an lonely enclave soldier
I think you don't realize how fucked our country is, and Trump won't stand for what you want. He's a business man, willing to sell anything to make a buck.
"After the oil rig explodes, you are alone, Navarro become annexed by the NCR, your superiors disappear, the other into the mojave and no way to go now, you found peace in the wasteland, but feel do many things so wrong"
God bless the enclave and god bless America
WTF happened in these comments lol... but yeah so pretty much any enclave soldier then?
That could have been a sweet plot hook for a Black-Isle developed Fallout 3 - you're an ex-enclave soldier who's done heinous shit in their lifetime and are looking for a fresh start. Will you turn over a new leaf, or hold onto the dying flame of the past? Will you seek redemption, or continue your destructive tendencies?
Ah, memories when I did having a hard time killing enemies since my weapon was only a spear. After exploring some places, I found Modoc. I saw the trader that he sells bullets and no gun. Checking his inventory has a shotgun, coins and some shells, no choice but I had to steal it. After that he caught me and I had to fight him. Then the other guys rushed on me and I killed those, very sad but it was the best moment of my gameplay.
Got to admit when I listen to this I imagine a town shrouded in myst in a valley.
twin peaks of fallout
The Courier waking up one morning in the dome of the think tank after being lobotomized:
This sounds almost like Icewind Dale, or Morrowind music. So calming, in such a wasteland.
I'm not tearing up.
Very majestic and gothic
I played this track when i finally found Randall Clark's body in Honest Hearts one summer evening after a rough day and damn the vibe hits like a nuke into the Long 15. it was simply glorious
This OST plays at the end of the Alice Hostetler quest in New Vegas. I got the ending where I convinced her to stay home and I didn't accept the reward. There are multiple possible endings, including one where she commits suicide in front of you. Regardless, you really feel sorry for her and this theme song fits perfectly. People have to grow up even in the post apocalyptic wasteland. Only now there are no therapists or teachers or clergymen or youth counselors. An interesting side quest for sure.
When I die.....I want this to play on loop at my funeral.
I was very pleasantly surprised when I re-heard this track in New Vegas, specifically in the Vault 21 Hotel.
Probably the best post apocalyptic game ever made
*** SPOILERS ***
I love this theme, and love the fact that Modoc later prospers.
This music in the beginning sounded melancholic and almost desperate, but when I saw the good ending of Modoc it now brings me hope.
This plays in Ranger Andy's Bungalow in NV
Actually waking up in a dream.
I am currently playing fallout 2 for the first time, and this theme feels so out of place, yet so fitting at the same time. I stumbled upon this town while making my way back to the den from vault city to get my highwayman, and now I just want to spend some more time listening to this track. Hope it plays somewhere else as well.
sadly it doesnt
the quest for modoc is worth finishing though
i did that same thing but i was in novac in one of the hotel rooms.. i just sat there and let the camera pan forever.. totally blown away.. its so nostalgic and melancholy
I love this piece of music, I was just totally captivated by it, such a sudden change in atmosphere, the first time I reached Modoc and just sat there listening to it, mesmerized.
You can hear this theme in New Vegas. It can play sometimes near a shack that's at the shore of Lake Mead, the Fisherman's Pride Shack, not much distance east from Camp Golf.
this track stood out immediately after reaching Modoc, its so serene
All these people talking about fallout 2 but I heard this in the honest hearts dlc. I was on the east part of Zion when I was with Joshua Graham on the final quest. It was night time and since the made skybox was more clear to see more stars it made the experience way better and realistic
Probably the only song I know of that gives me goosebumps
Gorgeous
When you get the modoc flourish ending
"You got hitched. Hey, it's your problem, not ours."
I love fallout
Whenever I hear this song, I can see a person, beat up by the apocalyptic world, take a view into the old world. Peace, tranquility, blissful silence. Seeing kids in clean clothes run up and down a smooth street in a perfect neighborhood. To see the blue sky, and the white clouds.
yeah the old world would probably look like heaven to them.
Very Brian Eno-esque. They definitely took heavy influence from him. really sets the dreary & hopeless tune of Modoc. This song really coveys the hopeless feeling of the apocalypse.
very emotional song.
A lone and bygone wanderer, amidst an empty and vast wasteland, roaming in search for something, yearning, searching restlessly, as he looks into the far distance of this now hollowed world, he lied down onto the ground, finally at peace with himself, here at the end of all things and looked up to the everlasting blue skies, his last desire.
My favourite Fallout track!
Truly humanity’s end credits