Diablo 3 music and sound are essential elements of the gameplay experience. While the visuals are more heavily-promoted, as evidenced by screenshots and gameplay movies, the sound is very important in creating the proper atmosphere. The Diablo series is well known for its excellent music and sound effects, much of those courtesy of the hard work by Blizzard North's Matt Uelmen. (Matt also contributed a lot of music to the WoW Burning Crusade expansion.)
The team working on the sound for Diablo 3 did not work on previous titles in the series, but they are skilled industry professionals and they've got years of experience producing past Blizzard titles including World of Warcraft. There are numerous samples of the Diablo III music and sound effects available below, and more can be heard in gameplay movies.
- Check the Music category for all news on Diablo III's music, courtesy of Diablo.IncGamers.com.
- Blizzard sells soundtracks and other musical elements from their games via their online store.
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Diablo III Audio TeamEdit
Two individuals are heading up the Diablo III sound and music production:
- Russell Brower is the Director of Audio and Video at Blizzard Entertainment. He is composing much of the music for Diablo III.
- Joseph Lawrence is the Lead Sound Designer for Diablo III. He is creating many of the sound effects, and contributes to the music as well.
Iteration During the Beta TestEdit
Every aspect of Diablo III remained under development during the beta test, including the sounds and music. New musical tracks were regularly added to the log in screen during the beta, and the NPC dialogues, lore dialogues, and other sound effects were regularly modified as well.
A news post on Diablo.IncGamers.com documented two such changes, with before and after versions of the same two speeches by the Skeleton King.
- View the post to hear the comparison tracks.
Diablo III MusicEdit
Diablo III's music is fairly similar to the music of D1 and D2. Orchestral and sweeping, with more of a classical than a rock vibe. There's a lot of variety though, as the Middle Eastern style of music heard in the cinematic introduction demonstrated. Only a few samples have been heard pre-game, many of which can be listened to right through your browser.
- Blizzard's online store offers a convenient place to buy music from all Blizzard titles.
Sample CompositionsEdit
The only full orchestral piece is the Diablo III Overture, which Blizzard released as a preview via iTunes. Excerpts from it can be heard in all of the Diablo III cinematics and gameplay movies.
Beta Music and SoundsEdit
During the beta test, fans extracted all of the sound files from the game client. These included only the music for the first half of Act One, but there are several pieces for every area in the game, which adds up to quite a lot even from just the start of Act One.
- Diablo.IncGamers.com presented the music in movies with appropriate screenshots and artwork. Two samples are seen below.
- Every piece of Beta music via YouTube (no visuals).
- Download all the leaked Beta music files.
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Atmospheric SoundscapesEdit
The various "Environments" pages on the official Diablo III site have music and sounds from those areas playing in an endless loop in the background. Open a browser tab and let one of these run for a while, to get a real sense of what you'll hear on those levels.
These can be downloaded in mp3 form via the following links. Thanks to a Diablo.IncGamers.com forum-user by the name of FlamangoHellfire for assembling multiple versions of all of the samples available as of late 2009 and shared them in a forum thread.
- World of Sanctuary.mp3
- Caldeum.mp3
- Caldeum New.mp3
- Cathedral v1.mp3
- Cathedral v2.mp3
- Characters.mp3
- Night.mp3
- Tristram v1.mp3
- Tristram v2.mp3
Diablo III MoviesEdit
The various Diablo III movies, both cinematic and gameplay, include numerous sound effects and some amount of music as well.
- The introductory cinematic.
- Cinematic: Wizard
- Cinematic: Monk
- Cinematic: Demon Hunter
- Gameplay WWI2008
- Gameplay: Blizzcon 2008
- Gameplay: Blizzcon 2009
- Gameplay: Blizzcon 2010
Diablo's Musical InfluencesEdit
Russel Brower replied to a fan's email about the Diablo III music with some great details. A partial quote. [1]
Too Subtle?Edit
The beta prompted much fan discussion of the music, with many comments that it was very atmospheric and subtle, perhaps too much so. Bashiok replied to one such comment in early September 2011.[2]
Diablo and its music is more about ambiance, as it’s a game that should mostly be filled with the sounds of slaughtering demons. Big epic tracks just aren’t very Diablo, and would very likely not mesh with the style of gameplay.
That’s just my guess as to what some people may be expecting. Diablo music is generally just mood-enhancing ambiance. But if you have other feedback, it’s welcome.Diablo III's Sound IntegrationEdit
The D3 Team haven't talked much about the sound or music of the game, but a few comments have been made. Community Manager Bashiok shared his feelings on the importance of the issue in a forum post from July 2009: [3]
Jay had an anecdote at ... the last BlizzCon I think, where he talked about Seismic Slam. It was one of if not the first Barbarian abilities created, actually first in the game entirely, and they were working on it and working on it, and just never really happy with it, and then one day the sound came back for it and they got it all working in game, and finally it all came together. It became this stunningly powerful feeling ability. I think that speaks volumes (nyuk nyuk) about how important sound is to the feeling of a game.
That same lesson is true through the development of the game. A new skills goes in and it seems awesome, it looks cool, but until you get the sound attached it just seems incomplete.
Just because a lot of the sounds are early renditions though, as amazing as they are, we’d need to make sure the audio engineers are far enough along where they’d want to showcase them. They’re perfectionists. So hopefully a sound feature is something we can do, but if I had to guess it won’t be for a while yet.Sound EffectsEdit
Elsewhere, Bashiok confirmed that the sound effects were still being created in-house, in the state of the art sound studios in Blizzard's headquarters in Irvine, California: [4]
Diablo II's MusicEdit
See the Sound page in the Diablo 2 section of this wiki for more details, including download links for the entire Diablo II soundtrack with commentary from composer Matt Uelmen.