Imagine if Whitney Houston's "I Will Always Love You" played. I know that Ayane and Hayate are related but it still fits because love from family members, friends, and other loved ones are powerful. But still, it kinda reminds me of This Is The End, like how Seth Rogen and Jay Baruchel were about to die together but they survived because their bond saved them.
@@mangelangel2570 It's not just random gibberish it's actually part of the mantra for the Godai Myo-O or "Five Wisdom Kings" it's REALLY hard to make out because of how much they use overlapping to make it sound even more mystical but the first half and parts of the middle are able to be made out and the last part "On Bazara Yakisha Un" is the ending to the mantra for the Godai Myo-O. The ending is specifically for the Myo-O "Kongo Yaksha" or the "Vajrayaksa"...which, fun fact, the little dagger that makes energy beams you see Ayane take up in DOA after defeating Genra? That's a type of Vajra, called a "tokkosho" a pestle like object with sharp single, dagger-like ends that indicate it's a Wrathful Vajra - made for the singular purpose of striking down evil in the name of good. The tokkosho is a symbolic item in Esoteric Buddhism, representing the indestructible nature of Buddhist law, and the power to defeat evil in its many forms. Genra used it for evil and his adopted daughter Ayane defeated him and took it from him in DOA3.