These young whippersnappers will never know the joy of waiting through every silent ten second track on a new CD, only to discover a secret song or message hidden on Track 99.
Oh hidden tracks greenday all by myself, Ben stiller on limp bizkit my favourite was Korn 🎵momma talking to me try to teach me how to live dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun they were so popular even shit Britpop band Travis did it.
Hidden tracks can still exist on the digital formats. Just put a load of silence after the last song, then boom! Hidden track... Although I haven't seen it done in a while.
@MenaceInc that must have been after my era then I stopped buying albums around 2002 and that's the first time I've ever heard of that but all late gen X know about the skip to 99 thing. Edit oh wow I stand corrected I just read the list I had NO idea about that secret track on immortal techniques album & shit some people were doing it back in 1993 thanks for dropping knowledge dude that's fucking cool!
Christ I remember playing this on a demo disc and it was one of the most surreal and confusing experiences I ever had as a kid. I didn't understand the abstract nature of the thing so I spent ages thinking that I just couldn't get it as I went swimming around for an objective or a score marker or something traditional. I think I also spent a few years growing up thinking that this was Ecco the Doplhin...
11:46 There's something about these chunky, heavily bitmapped menu interfaces in PS1 games that's so nostalgic. The game itself is like a meld of MTV Music Generator and LSD Dream Emulator. There's also a very similar title on the 3DO called Digital Dreamware - it's basically the Visualizer from Windows Media Player 6 years early.
Music 2000 was actually really good for making some banging choons! You could put cds in your PS and channel your inner Jazzy Jeff and layer up the samples like a proper jam master!
I would also recommend checking out Vib-Ribbon, a PS1 rhythm game. The game is small enough to be loaded into the RAM entirely so discs can be hotswapped to load in custom tracks.
Same, I found myself singing the intro to myself at work a couple of days ago. One of my colleagues heard me and said "what the f* are you singing" I simply replied with "you wouldn't get it" 😂
Let's bring back the song! Altogether now: Up Down Up Down Left Right Left Right B A Start I've got the code I've got the password To unlock your heart Will you play a game? I promise not to cheat Nintendo or Atari, boy I think you're really sweet Im a super scoring girl with glitches, graphics on my mind, And like a Contra code I'm full of life, But never out of time We can play together You be player 1, I don't mind 2 As long as it's a good controller And I get to sit with you Ahhhh happy times
Just had a horrible day at work, my dog has been in pain recently, and I feel like the world is on top of me. Fortunately I have just had a nice uplifting video from my King Louis, thank you my Liege, your content has made me smile.
The visuals dont look as weird if you grew up on late night music cable channel electronic music blocks (like MTV Chill Out Zone), a lot of early to mid 90s electronic music (usually rhe more IDM, trancey and chill stuff) relied a lot in very surreal early 3D renders, or stuff ripped from the Mind's Eye series. I think this is what it was aiming at
Track 1 was always Data, if it had "CD Audio" then yes, it would work on a CD player. However, some games used a Midi-like audio system, Much like the N64, and was much harder to recreate outside of the game engine.
I have this game still and I even released an EP of it simply called 'The Fluid EP'. One of the tracks is still on my RUclips I made a jungle track on it by playing all the sounds like from the beat grid with an audio lead from my TV into my pc and pressing record on audacity. It sounded bit crunched and dated but that's part of the nostalgia and fun. I also got it mastered so it sounded pretty good. Fluid is a simple game where you can get lost in the melodies and the nostalgia. A mate of mine had an emulator on his pc and managed to rip all the samples from the game and we made proper tracks on FL Studio :) was a nice little project. I love the old sounds in it and sometimes still use them in my productions to this day. I did release a hardcore tune on a label using music 2000, once again using the samples and getting the tune mastered. It's mad what you can do with less amounts of samples it makes u more creative instead of having millions of samples and plugins of all the sounds you want in the world and no idea what to do with them. Simplicity sometimes is a great way of improving your creativity :)
I'm in the demoscene and seeing something this... for lack of a better word, presentational and technical, is so marvelous and beautiful to me. Lots of 90s demos from that era have these beautiful vista-like environments with electronic music that you can just watch and get yourself lost in. I have to imagine the developers of this game were at least cautiously observing the demoscene and fueled this with some of that love.
So good to see Mr. Squishes again! Thanks for sharing this video, Octavius... and much respect to you for being able to get through those two weeks of depression you'd mentioned.
Your video is a balm for my unquiet mental state right now. Thanks for the upload. Also, thanks for bringing Fluid to my attention, I passed it by thinking it was going to be a load of baubles. (I ended up buying Syphon Filter 2 instead.) I now know what I missed out on and how wrong I was back then.
I'm delighted you've done this fab review, I sent this game to nostalgia nerd and I remember you unboxing it with him in a video! Wire was always my favourite
Reminds me of those electonic music visualizer vhs's you could get and use them for ambience when your having a party back in the day when jungle and house music where huge and everywhere.
One of my favourite things to do with a PS1 was to put the original Wipeout game in, wait for a track to load, and just before the race starts, pause the game, open the PS1 and change the disc for one of my own CDs. then unpause the race and voila, you've got your own soundtrack. Because it plays the tracks in order it works better with CD singles rather than albums. I had every Prodigy single on CD, which are what I used most of the time, which is funny 'cos one of those songs was eventually put on one of the sequels.
Cheer1 Moving the dolphin up and down. 7:18 That's quite the euphemism. I remember when you played this on Twitch and chat was absolutely losing it. Great video! ❤
I loved Fluid. Used to set it up in a multi-sensory room day centre, using a modified Playstation controller so a group of players could interact with it as a band using head-switches and the like. We used Music 2000 too, but Fluid was best for flowing music. You can do a 360 degree flip jumping out of the water if you're going fast enough by the way.
While in Japan I went on a nation wide hunt for obscure ps1 dolphin games and thus is one of them. After the first 30 minutes the words “abyss” flashed on screen and then crashed. It really added to an already weird game
I'm really tripped out. I remember playing this for hours on end but have no recollection of the dolphin bits lol! Music and Music 2000 though, that's what I first started producing music with. Then got the third one on ps2 called 'mtv music generator'. You could mail order a sampler for it turning the ps2 into a legit usuable DAW. Ahh memories. Thanks for the vid octavious 😊
You should heck out the digital audio workstations for the PS-1 & 2 (Mtv's Muic Generators) & E-Jay programs.. you could write classic jungle, hip-hop, trance, techno, and drum n bass. They taught and inspred me to buy my first PC and contiue to write till today. Love the channel x cheers it's certifiable bobbins asf!
Still have the demo that came with Official PS Magazine. Does anyone remember Demo 1 where it had the visualisations and you could swap it out with a CD and it would play the viz with your music as well?
It looks like a progenitor of games like Flow, Journey, and Abzu. I'd never heard of it before, but I love it. Also... Depth: The controls are just manipulating your dolphin up and down, so you think you're making music even though you're not.
The PS1 is my favorite consoles because it was so experimental. Nobody really understood how to make 3D games so they tried just about everything. Not to mention games started to use FMV or anime for cutscenes which is usually turns out pretty funny.
Regarding playing music on the PS1, I remember my mind being blown when someone told me that if you launched Tomb Raider II but re-opened the lid afterwards (or propped it open from the start, I don't remember exactly. Either way, not actually recommended as I believe that can damage the laser and your CD), you could access the PlayStation's BIOS thing (you know, the menu you'd get if you'd turn the PS1 on without a game in) and play it like a music CD, allowing you to listen to the full soundtrack as well as all the sounds, including cutscene dialogue.
i wonder if there is a miniscul small connection to the Dream Dance Samplers, also from Sony that also features dolphins and a similar music style, so much so that a level could be one of their TV-ads if it had been rendered by a Workstation. They even both came out 96
I still remember this game at the time of its release: all reviews were ending without a vote...ehm, yeah! That was the very same situation happened to a very similar PS1 "game" called Baby Universe.
Christ, I thought this game lived in my insane imagination. I remember seeing it as a youngster then never seeing it again. Thinking I had made it up. Looking at it now, young Ry would have loved it in between trying to become the new Paul Oakenfold while making some cool trance on Music 2000. :) Cracking video btw. Thanks!
It blew my mind when i first got a PS4 and popped in an audio CD only to be told that the format was not recognised. Defo made me feel like i was getting old.
Fluid is cool, a lil abstract if you looked at this kind of "game" as a means to make music, but that wasn't a bad thing. My friends and I had a really fun time chilling out with this after a session of Music / Music 2000 (Jesters / Codemasters). Music 2000 was a great DAW, only let down by RAM and sample storage on memory cards.
I think back at the time this probably made a lot of sense to some. The boom of rave, acid and pills all over the place. Fractal images all around and music for the jilted generation cranked.. I've never seen it, but i did frequent bedsits full of people off their heads (some who never came back fully, and exist in some between worlds place still today) who'd have happily zoned out in front of this for hours going 'woah, dude, what's it all about, man' at the visuals 🤣 Kind of reminds me of an extended Amiga demo with some interaction. The mixing part near the end reminded me of the loader on the C64 game, Delta.
Alao, the original model playstation has a hideen feature in which if you put a music disc in it and press the top shoulder buttons down, a trippy interactive colored shape screen will appear. Pressing left and right will change the shapes and pressing up and down will zoom in and out. You can also change the colors too. The smaller redesigned PSone doesn't have that feature. Idk if its on PAL consoles though.
First time I hear about Fluid but I was able to play a demo of the game Vib Ribbon which also made use of music CDs when it was on a PlayStation Magazine demo CD. It sounds pretty enjoyable :). I’m with you on the dial up modem sounds !
OCT you mentioned in previous Vids about your health issues and I want to say a MASSSSSIVE thank I also have the same Issues and Mentally I thought I was Alone I understand you x x
I remember that... software. I'm calling it like that because it wasn't a game, it was quite an experience. Actually you were expecting to find a game by putting a disc in your PS1 back in the days. I remember chillin' to the vibes of that thing. I remember also contacting a local radio back then, talking about this software and the PS1 and they even invited me on the air asking about bringing the PS1 to do something at the radio, but eventually I never made it...
ya for music creation on the PS1 I got MTV music generator, It could even make music video''s tho saving one decent 4 min song was almost half of a memory card and the video I think used about a whole one luckily I had one of those 52 in one memory card's.
I still have my copy of it in a box, along with Music. I think I only got the PS1 as a stop gap between my Amiga and getting a new PC for making music. Thanks to this video, I might have to break the PS1 back out again!
PC CD-ROM games from about this era regularly used Red Book audio for game soundtracks - the joy being that if you had a full install on the hard drive, the trick worked both ways: not only could you play the game CD in your CD player, you could eject it mid-game, put in your own music CDs, and have your own soundtrack. The number of games I used to play which were supposed to have a pumping techno soundtrack, except I'd be enjoying them with vintage Britpop. I've also got a copy of NASCAR Racing which came with some bonus audio tracks not used in the game. That felt so cool aged about 12 playing them on my dad's fancy proper hi-fi seperate CD player and amplifier with the massive tall speakers...
Just discovered this channel and I can already say.... I never thought I'd see a giant Count Duckula in the same corner as a relatively normal sized Rainbow Dash.
I have in fact played this while under the influence of LSD and it was quite the experience. Kept me intrigued for several hours, I quite enjoyed it all. lol
Thought the disc had been priced at 870.02, which would be a very specific price but it is B70.02 I presume for Bagels, which is also a very specific price
I don’t know if I would say this really qualifies as “a game” considering you can’t really win or lose and there’s really no end goal. Like you said it’s really more of an interactive screensaver playing a round with lounge / elevator music than anything else. I am still not sure I understand who the intended target audience for this was, but maybe it was one of those “Japan only trends” at the time that you never got to see anywhere else or maybe it was just a developers attempt at testing the market for interest in such a thing….who knows Anyway, thank you for the video and keep up the good work 🍻
Hmm. I have one of those 3D tv's. (Anyone remember those?) This would absolutely trippy with it's 2D->3D conversion thingy. Also, yup, finding out a game had music as Redbook Audio was always a, two for the price of one thingy. Alien Trilogy had some banging tunes, as did Lifeforce:Tenka. Some Demo discs also, the Manta Ray demo from Demo 1, appropriately, has a really chill tune. I think the same disk also had Apollo 440's Carreda Rapido, from Rapid Racer. Thumpin'!
It's interesting to me how the Playstation had this raft of experimental experiential games unlike the sort of thing that had made it to earlier consoles, like this or Kaze No Notam or LSD Dream Emulator. People just excited to see what new and dreamlike things they could make with the expanded technical horizons. Also this reminds me of an anti-drugs CD-ROM I was given in school called D-Code, where at the end for completing all the tasks you get to enter the "Arcade Of Sound", a peculiar little graphical sound-mixer that didn't really QUITE function as an actual music maker but definitely gave me an early taste for manipulating audio into strange new things. I keep meaning to send a copy to Nostalgia Nerd for him to hopefully make a video (apologies, I would send it to you but I do not know how well it works on modern PCs and Peter does own every model of PC since 1972 so he has a better chance of getting it up and running)
We NEED that D-Code video. I've searched for that high and low. Does the disc contain the audio files? Everyone I've ever spoken to about that has no idea what I'm talking about but this confirms it was real haha
I remember playing the demo of Fluid from the official PlayStation magazine. I thought it was pretty cool and enjoyed mixing the tracks. I did get bored of that so never bought it. Thanks for the great video 👍👍
Ho ho, I'm more intrigue at looking your Count Duckula plushie. Hmm, I've never come across this game before. It's nice if you have something to relax to I suppose.
Great video, as always! I got a lot more fun out of the PSX demo with the T-Rex on than this one. Dolphins are cool and all, but you could open the dinosaur mouth! Roar!
I've just found a game called "In Extremis" which maybe interesting to you since you love crappy games. In Extremis is an absolute chore to complete: Claustrophobic and repetitive environments, Supply management that is your worst enemy, Enemies that can stunlock you to death, Enemy spawners that will drive you insane, bunch of unskipable animations related to interactions and final boss that requires 20+ minutes to kill. Oh, and copyright infringements everywhere. I'd love to see your opinion on this mess.
I could see it: 1--get stoned. 2--"I bet Fluid would be fun. 3--"Woah." And finally, five minutes later--"This isn't fun anymore." I would likely then eat two bowls of cereal and play Age of Empires.
Hi I haven't left a comment on your channel before. I found it during lockdown. Just wanted too say great too see you back a hope but understand if you dont post vids regularly. Take care. Paul. xxx
These young whippersnappers will never know the joy of waiting through every silent ten second track on a new CD, only to discover a secret song or message hidden on Track 99.
God I love hidden tracks.
Oh hidden tracks greenday all by myself, Ben stiller on limp bizkit my favourite was Korn 🎵momma talking to me try to teach me how to live dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun dun they were so popular even shit Britpop band Travis did it.
Hidden tracks can still exist on the digital formats. Just put a load of silence after the last song, then boom! Hidden track... Although I haven't seen it done in a while.
@MenaceInc that must have been after my era then I stopped buying albums around 2002 and that's the first time I've ever heard of that but all late gen X know about the skip to 99 thing. Edit oh wow I stand corrected I just read the list I had NO idea about that secret track on immortal
techniques album & shit some people were doing it back in 1993 thanks for dropping knowledge dude that's fucking cool!
Don’t forget LOADING SCREENS! All the GODDAMN LOADING SCREENS!
Christ I remember playing this on a demo disc and it was one of the most surreal and confusing experiences I ever had as a kid. I didn't understand the abstract nature of the thing so I spent ages thinking that I just couldn't get it as I went swimming around for an objective or a score marker or something traditional.
I think I also spent a few years growing up thinking that this was Ecco the Doplhin...
11:46 There's something about these chunky, heavily bitmapped menu interfaces in PS1 games that's so nostalgic. The game itself is like a meld of MTV Music Generator and LSD Dream Emulator. There's also a very similar title on the 3DO called Digital Dreamware - it's basically the Visualizer from Windows Media Player 6 years early.
You are one of the most relatable content creators on this platform
You only just found that out! Octavius is amazing!
Music 2000 was actually really good for making some banging choons! You could put cds in your PS and channel your inner Jazzy Jeff and layer up the samples like a proper jam master!
Oh yeah lots of mixing was done to WWF the music volumes 3&4 😂
I would also recommend checking out Vib-Ribbon, a PS1 rhythm game. The game is small enough to be loaded into the RAM entirely so discs can be hotswapped to load in custom tracks.
Caddicarus has a video on it. It looks fascinating.
I had a demo disc with vib on it, i was blown away by how such a minimalist game could keep me engaged and sort of wowed by it. I should get a copy.
Why don't we get the full intro song anymore? I like the intro! It is cute and cheesy as fuck and just makes me go "aww"...
I'll see what I can do about the intro song :)
Same, I found myself singing the intro to myself at work a couple of days ago. One of my colleagues heard me and said "what the f* are you singing" I simply replied with "you wouldn't get it" 😂
@@petrolhead0387 Yeah I used to love the intro song with the lyrics and everything, it was cool
Let's bring back the song!
Altogether now:
Up Down Up Down
Left Right Left Right
B A Start
I've got the code
I've got the password
To unlock your heart
Will you play a game?
I promise not to cheat
Nintendo or Atari, boy
I think you're really sweet
Im a super scoring girl with glitches, graphics on my mind,
And like a Contra code I'm full of life,
But never out of time
We can play together
You be player 1, I don't mind 2
As long as it's a good controller
And I get to sit with you
Ahhhh happy times
Here's hopping that you are doing well. Your videos always put me in a good mood before going to sleep!
9:10 - The Spotify Playlist Mockup straight cracked me up.
Just had a horrible day at work, my dog has been in pain recently, and I feel like the world is on top of me.
Fortunately I have just had a nice uplifting video from my King Louis, thank you my Liege, your content has made me smile.
Thought her name was sarah
The visuals dont look as weird if you grew up on late night music cable channel electronic music blocks (like MTV Chill Out Zone), a lot of early to mid 90s electronic music (usually rhe more IDM, trancey and chill stuff) relied a lot in very surreal early 3D renders, or stuff ripped from the Mind's Eye series. I think this is what it was aiming at
Track 1 was always Data, if it had "CD Audio" then yes, it would work on a CD player.
However, some games used a Midi-like audio system, Much like the N64, and was much harder to recreate outside of the game engine.
I have this game still and I even released an EP of it simply called 'The Fluid EP'. One of the tracks is still on my RUclips I made a jungle track on it by playing all the sounds like from the beat grid with an audio lead from my TV into my pc and pressing record on audacity. It sounded bit crunched and dated but that's part of the nostalgia and fun. I also got it mastered so it sounded pretty good.
Fluid is a simple game where you can get lost in the melodies and the nostalgia. A mate of mine had an emulator on his pc and managed to rip all the samples from the game and we made proper tracks on FL Studio :) was a nice little project.
I love the old sounds in it and sometimes still use them in my productions to this day.
I did release a hardcore tune on a label using music 2000, once again using the samples and getting the tune mastered. It's mad what you can do with less amounts of samples it makes u more creative instead of having millions of samples and plugins of all the sounds you want in the world and no idea what to do with them.
Simplicity sometimes is a great way of improving your creativity :)
I'm in the demoscene and seeing something this... for lack of a better word, presentational and technical, is so marvelous and beautiful to me. Lots of 90s demos from that era have these beautiful vista-like environments with electronic music that you can just watch and get yourself lost in. I have to imagine the developers of this game were at least cautiously observing the demoscene and fueled this with some of that love.
So good to see Mr. Squishes again! Thanks for sharing this video, Octavius... and much respect to you for being able to get through those two weeks of depression you'd mentioned.
Music 2000 was my first entry into making electronic music.
Mine too. The second one was one of the main reasons I got a PS2.
Your video is a balm for my unquiet mental state right now. Thanks for the upload.
Also, thanks for bringing Fluid to my attention, I passed it by thinking it was going to be a load of baubles. (I ended up buying Syphon Filter 2 instead.) I now know what I missed out on and how wrong I was back then.
I'm delighted you've done this fab review, I sent this game to nostalgia nerd and I remember you unboxing it with him in a video! Wire was always my favourite
Do you really think Peter would miss it??
I doubt he would ever find out it's gone under his piles of Hardware...😂
Comment from 7 days ago but video released 2 hours ago. I think RUclips is broken
@@Cephlin Nah, early viewers via patreon
@@Cephlin You'd think by now that people would understand Patreon. I mean it's only existed for 10 years now.
@@BobMonkeypimp "Is this some sort of peasant comment I'm too rich to understand?"
@@shia_labeouf Too poor to understand. Back to your hovel, serf.
Reminds me of those electonic music visualizer vhs's you could get and use them for ambience when your having a party back in the day when jungle and house music where huge and everywhere.
I'm gonna open the world's first "Dial-Up Pub" for Octy...
One of my favourite things to do with a PS1 was to put the original Wipeout game in, wait for a track to load, and just before the race starts, pause the game, open the PS1 and change the disc for one of my own CDs. then unpause the race and voila, you've got your own soundtrack. Because it plays the tracks in order it works better with CD singles rather than albums.
I had every Prodigy single on CD, which are what I used most of the time, which is funny 'cos one of those songs was eventually put on one of the sequels.
This is why the PS1 era was number 1 for me, the shear creativity and new ideas made the console.
I'll admit I'm a sucker for trippy stuff, ESPECIALLY in underwater environments, so...yeah, this is kinda up my alley. Nice job!
Cheer1 Moving the dolphin up and down.
7:18 That's quite the euphemism.
I remember when you played this on Twitch and chat was absolutely losing it. Great video! ❤
I loved Fluid. Used to set it up in a multi-sensory room day centre, using a modified Playstation controller so a group of players could interact with it as a band using head-switches and the like. We used Music 2000 too, but Fluid was best for flowing music.
You can do a 360 degree flip jumping out of the water if you're going fast enough by the way.
The track 'peace' truly used to live up to its name when I listened to it all those years ago
It was like the sound of my perfect world
While in Japan I went on a nation wide hunt for obscure ps1 dolphin games and thus is one of them. After the first 30 minutes the words “abyss” flashed on screen and then crashed. It really added to an already weird game
I'm so old I remember playing the music tracks from my Sega CD games!
Love the content as always, you have an awesome personality!
I'm really tripped out.
I remember playing this for hours on end but have no recollection of the dolphin bits lol!
Music and Music 2000 though, that's what I first started producing music with. Then got the third one on ps2 called 'mtv music generator'. You could mail order a sampler for it turning the ps2 into a legit usuable DAW.
Ahh memories. Thanks for the vid octavious 😊
You should heck out the digital audio workstations for the PS-1 & 2 (Mtv's Muic Generators) & E-Jay programs.. you could write classic jungle, hip-hop, trance, techno, and drum n bass. They taught and inspred me to buy my first PC and contiue to write till today.
Love the channel x cheers it's certifiable bobbins asf!
Looks like 99% of all Orb videos. Great content as usual...best channel on RUclips!
Still have the demo that came with Official PS Magazine. Does anyone remember Demo 1 where it had the visualisations and you could swap it out with a CD and it would play the viz with your music as well?
It looks like a progenitor of games like Flow, Journey, and Abzu. I'd never heard of it before, but I love it.
Also... Depth: The controls are just manipulating your dolphin up and down, so you think you're making music even though you're not.
Far out, man!
Honestly though, some of that looks really soothing. I can imagine losing the occasional hour or two monkeying around with that.
The PS1 is my favorite consoles because it was so experimental. Nobody really understood how to make 3D games so they tried just about everything. Not to mention games started to use FMV or anime for cutscenes which is usually turns out pretty funny.
The PS1's library was so vast that a bunch of random oddball stuff like this just flew under everyone's radar.
And if you put a game disc into an older CD player that didn't filter out the data tracks you got treated to some horrible noises!
This! I remember trying it when I got the Abe's Oddysee demo in a gaming magazine. It was pure earrape indeed.
Regarding playing music on the PS1, I remember my mind being blown when someone told me that if you launched Tomb Raider II but re-opened the lid afterwards (or propped it open from the start, I don't remember exactly. Either way, not actually recommended as I believe that can damage the laser and your CD), you could access the PlayStation's BIOS thing (you know, the menu you'd get if you'd turn the PS1 on without a game in) and play it like a music CD, allowing you to listen to the full soundtrack as well as all the sounds, including cutscene dialogue.
i wonder if there is a miniscul small connection to the Dream Dance Samplers, also from Sony that also features dolphins and a similar music style,
so much so that a level could be one of their TV-ads if it had been rendered by a Workstation.
They even both came out 96
I still remember this game at the time of its release: all reviews were ending without a vote...ehm, yeah!
That was the very same situation happened to a very similar PS1 "game" called Baby Universe.
I agree. Games like this (along with others such as Flow, Journey, Abzu and Flower) are more akin to "experiences" than games.
Just found the channel and binge watched all afternoon and evening! Love the style, humour and personality of these videos.
Christ, I thought this game lived in my insane imagination. I remember seeing it as a youngster then never seeing it again. Thinking I had made it up.
Looking at it now, young Ry would have loved it in between trying to become the new Paul Oakenfold while making some cool trance on Music 2000. :)
Cracking video btw. Thanks!
It blew my mind when i first got a PS4 and popped in an audio CD only to be told that the format was not recognised. Defo made me feel like i was getting old.
Fluid is cool, a lil abstract if you looked at this kind of "game" as a means to make music, but that wasn't a bad thing. My friends and I had a really fun time chilling out with this after a session of Music / Music 2000 (Jesters / Codemasters). Music 2000 was a great DAW, only let down by RAM and sample storage on memory cards.
As always well done, I wish we had this in the states I would of loved it. You rock, you made my day with this video. Much love and peace, take care.
I think back at the time this probably made a lot of sense to some. The boom of rave, acid and pills all over the place. Fractal images all around and music for the jilted generation cranked.. I've never seen it, but i did frequent bedsits full of people off their heads (some who never came back fully, and exist in some between worlds place still today) who'd have happily zoned out in front of this for hours going 'woah, dude, what's it all about, man' at the visuals 🤣 Kind of reminds me of an extended Amiga demo with some interaction. The mixing part near the end reminded me of the loader on the C64 game, Delta.
I like that the lighting on the dolphin changes to loosely match the stage.
I dunno about the death of CDs... I do keep encountering Gen Zers who are rediscovering the joy of physical media.
That bit from 7:18 hits differently when you're Dutch and followed the news in early 2016.
Lol, I forgot about that.
Alao, the original model playstation has a hideen feature in which if you put a music disc in it and press the top shoulder buttons down, a trippy interactive colored shape screen will appear. Pressing left and right will change the shapes and pressing up and down will zoom in and out. You can also change the colors too. The smaller redesigned PSone doesn't have that feature. Idk if its on PAL consoles though.
First time I hear about Fluid but I was able to play a demo of the game Vib Ribbon which also made use of music CDs when it was on a PlayStation Magazine demo CD. It sounds pretty enjoyable :). I’m with you on the dial up modem sounds !
OCT you mentioned in previous Vids about your health issues and I want to say a MASSSSSIVE thank I also have the same Issues and Mentally I thought I was Alone I understand you x x
I remember that... software. I'm calling it like that because it wasn't a game, it was quite an experience. Actually you were expecting to find a game by putting a disc in your PS1 back in the days. I remember chillin' to the vibes of that thing. I remember also contacting a local radio back then, talking about this software and the PS1 and they even invited me on the air asking about bringing the PS1 to do something at the radio, but eventually I never made it...
That relaxing movement feeling is why I'm a Warframe player, though it gets fast enough that people have trouble keeping track of everything.
Nice. I think the trippiest games, for me, are Weird Dreams on the Atari ST and Trip-A-Tron by Jeff Minter, Llamasoft.
Loved trying out the different sound options on the ps1 for my fave CDs.
ya for music creation on the PS1 I got MTV music generator, It could even make music video''s tho saving one decent 4 min song was almost half of a memory card and the video I think used about a whole one luckily I had one of those 52 in one memory card's.
I still have my copy of it in a box, along with Music. I think I only got the PS1 as a stop gap between my Amiga and getting a new PC for making music.
Thanks to this video, I might have to break the PS1 back out again!
It's like they developed a tech demo, that they intended to be a more polished game but just gave up and released it.
PC CD-ROM games from about this era regularly used Red Book audio for game soundtracks - the joy being that if you had a full install on the hard drive, the trick worked both ways: not only could you play the game CD in your CD player, you could eject it mid-game, put in your own music CDs, and have your own soundtrack. The number of games I used to play which were supposed to have a pumping techno soundtrack, except I'd be enjoying them with vintage Britpop.
I've also got a copy of NASCAR Racing which came with some bonus audio tracks not used in the game. That felt so cool aged about 12 playing them on my dad's fancy proper hi-fi seperate CD player and amplifier with the massive tall speakers...
Yay another video! Thanks! As always, I hope all is well for you.
Just discovered this channel and I can already say.... I never thought I'd see a giant Count Duckula in the same corner as a relatively normal sized Rainbow Dash.
always good to see good to see your vlogs and you thank you Xx
Woot! The algorithm officially made up with me! Your video make me laugh for real and I love it so much! Cheers octavius 🍻
That was a delight! Thank you!
9:13 That playlist in full:
What in the Utter S*1t is Going On
1 Peace
2 Erm, what, sorry?
3 FU
Sound of the Summer x
Cheers for the chuckles , I hope you are doing well in yourself
Had never heard of this one before, as you said, more art piece than game but well worth the look. Great video.
Loved Music 2000 on the PlayStation,
with a Bong and a bagel.
I dld the cd-player testing back in the day, we all did. Then the random cd onto the PSX with monster rancher. It was a weird plattaform.
I have in fact played this while under the influence of LSD and it was quite the experience. Kept me intrigued for several hours, I quite enjoyed it all. lol
Thought the disc had been priced at 870.02, which would be a very specific price but it is B70.02 I presume for Bagels, which is also a very specific price
this looks so soothing great vid again octavius
I used to play a lot of CDs on my PS1 octavius king a great cd player nice to see a new video by you 👍
I don’t know if I would say this really qualifies as “a game” considering you can’t really win or lose and there’s really no end goal. Like you said it’s really more of an interactive screensaver playing a round with lounge / elevator music than anything else.
I am still not sure I understand who the intended target audience for this was, but maybe it was one of those “Japan only trends” at the time that you never got to see anywhere else or maybe it was just a developers attempt at testing the market for interest in such a thing….who knows
Anyway, thank you for the video and keep up the good work 🍻
Hmm. I have one of those 3D tv's. (Anyone remember those?) This would absolutely trippy with it's 2D->3D conversion thingy. Also, yup, finding out a game had music as Redbook Audio was always a, two for the price of one thingy. Alien Trilogy had some banging tunes, as did Lifeforce:Tenka. Some Demo discs also, the Manta Ray demo from Demo 1, appropriately, has a really chill tune. I think the same disk also had Apollo 440's Carreda Rapido, from Rapid Racer. Thumpin'!
It's interesting to me how the Playstation had this raft of experimental experiential games unlike the sort of thing that had made it to earlier consoles, like this or Kaze No Notam or LSD Dream Emulator. People just excited to see what new and dreamlike things they could make with the expanded technical horizons. Also this reminds me of an anti-drugs CD-ROM I was given in school called D-Code, where at the end for completing all the tasks you get to enter the "Arcade Of Sound", a peculiar little graphical sound-mixer that didn't really QUITE function as an actual music maker but definitely gave me an early taste for manipulating audio into strange new things. I keep meaning to send a copy to Nostalgia Nerd for him to hopefully make a video (apologies, I would send it to you but I do not know how well it works on modern PCs and Peter does own every model of PC since 1972 so he has a better chance of getting it up and running)
Not many consoles have a public development kit that anybody can buy for a couple hundred bucks.
Net Yaroze.
We NEED that D-Code video. I've searched for that high and low. Does the disc contain the audio files?
Everyone I've ever spoken to about that has no idea what I'm talking about but this confirms it was real haha
Love the game much, that and Ghost in the Shell. Chill as can be, loved to get pissed and just "play"
I remember playing the demo of Fluid from the official PlayStation magazine. I thought it was pretty cool and enjoyed mixing the tracks. I did get bored of that so never bought it. Thanks for the great video 👍👍
The Sony ps1 game MUSIC 2000 was a way better music creative game experience. I made some cool music tracks back in the day.
Ho ho, I'm more intrigue at looking your Count Duckula plushie.
Hmm, I've never come across this game before. It's nice if you have something to relax to I suppose.
This game looks pretty cool man, in surprised I never heard of it before, cheers for the vid
I didn’t know Depth could sound that hot. Nice!
Great video, as always! I got a lot more fun out of the PSX demo with the T-Rex on than this one. Dolphins are cool and all, but you could open the dinosaur mouth! Roar!
Feels like electroplankton on the ds is a bit of a progression on this game. Kind of like a fidget toy with noise.
Another great video and a game that i would most likely buy, for when the brain fog hits and I don't have the energy for a challenge.
I saw a dolphin and immediately got nightmarish flashbacks to Ecco, so glad it's just another submerged fever dream starring a tiny whale
It's like somebody looked at Ecco the Dolphin and asked, "What if we make *this* but with less gameplay?"
Octavius out here like "suh dude, I stole your game" to thousands of people, and Peter may be one of her subs.
I've just found a game called "In Extremis" which maybe interesting to you since you love crappy games. In Extremis is an absolute chore to complete: Claustrophobic and repetitive environments, Supply management that is your worst enemy, Enemies that can stunlock you to death, Enemy spawners that will drive you insane, bunch of unskipable animations related to interactions and final boss that requires 20+ minutes to kill. Oh, and copyright infringements everywhere. I'd love to see your opinion on this mess.
Your content brights my day.
Azure Dreams for ps1 has a genuine computer virus on the official release. Could be an awesome video :). Youre SO FUNNY lil Sarah!!
Not sure if you're aware, but Sarah goes by the name Louis now.
Your intro sequence is legendary to me 👌🙌🙌🙌
Love your videos. You have amazing Charisma! Stay Awesome!
Must say.. some days I feel like a male 'Octy'
Thank goodness for this channel!!!
PS Oct reminds me of Betty Boop!!
I could see it: 1--get stoned. 2--"I bet Fluid would be fun. 3--"Woah." And finally, five minutes later--"This isn't fun anymore." I would likely then eat two bowls of cereal and play Age of Empires.
I've played a few of Opus' fighting games. Some are pretty rad.
Looks cool! Thanks for letting us know about this game.
Hi I haven't left a comment on your channel before. I found it during lockdown. Just wanted too say great too see you back a hope but understand if you dont post vids regularly. Take care. Paul. xxx