So Scott use these old alarms for fanf 3 when I was young I heard these song when some RU-vidr did a game play even so here the song he used 1:08 and 1:50 and last one which is fanf 2 is 2:44 c:
It's actually because they didn't want to terrorize anyone who heard these alarms! Imagine you are a baby and you are on your mother's lap and out of nowhere you hear a great desperate noise and you start to cry. To prevent that from happening, they put these songs on so it's not hopeless or terrifying for kids and adults alike.
Random fact: the uk’s was alarm is actually something most childrens music boxes play. As well as the Philippines. They where all made into something similar to a music box so it would calm people and remind them of their happier childhood as they died. This is what I was told by my grandfather. I have no clue if it’s true or not, but if it is that’s really messed up. (Edit #1) i found an old music box of mine and it does indeed play the song the uk had as their das alarm.
Most of countries in 1900: so, lets do an EAS alarm as a music box, so peoples wouldn't get scaried. *Actually do a terrifying horror movie song that makes peoples get more anxiety*
i can sense that the one's near 1920-1970 just put those soft songs so people won't be super alarmed and be calm while being bombed, because there's no way back
Fun Fact: Philippines 1940 is a song called "My Grandfather's Clock" and plays in Fnaf 2 as the song you hear when you wound the puppet's music box. Edit: Those of you who know you know k? This is for those who didn't
My ratings: 0:00 🇵🇱 poland (1939) 8/10 it's sad. 😓 0:08 🇦🇷 argentina (1922) 9/10 image hearing that when you're sleeping at night. 0:30 🇻🇳 vietnam (1964) 0/10 it's a xylophone playing a sad music. 0:49 🇸🇦 saudi arabia (1924) 2/10 I travelled in saudi arabia when I was two months old and I Didn't knew that the FNAF characters were in saudi arabia. 😞 1:09 🇩🇪 germany (1945) 1.9/10 ice cream truck in 3:00am. 1:23 🇨🇴 colombia (1903) 4/10 it's calm not scary don't judge me. 1:48 🇬🇧 uk (1939) 2/10 poor kingdom. 😔 2:02🇨🇾 cyprus (1974) 0/10 it was supposed to be a sad song not germany 1945 high pitched. 😡 2:15 🇰🇷 south korea (1950) 10/10 su*c*de mouse jumpscared me and this happened. 😧 2:43 🇵🇭 philippines (1940) 0/10 why is everyone scared from this alarm? It's a music box.
@@cassandra_bonnet its because It was supposed to be a march song called "pierzwa burygada(I think its burygada)" Due to the radio's quality,it got like it
My ratings: Argentina: 10.01 / 10 Its a burning memory of your first day of baby scool UK: I heard it play in a song before 5 / 10 South Korea: 420 / 10 No reason u prob understand too Vietnam:12/10 Makes me want to sleep the more I listen Saudi Arabia 10/10 sounds like a dead woman haunting a school Germany: No / 10 sounds like a scary ice cream truck Polish:420,000/10 NAH HELP ME BRUH THATS TERRIFYING Colombia: 960,690/10 MY FRIEND ARE YOU POSSESSED Philip: No Sleep/10 Thanks for giving me endless paranoia
Other eas alarms: Seems fine Vietnam eas alarm: Idk this exists in my country Saudi Arabia eas alarm: bad ending South Korea eas alarm: "The sights of hell brings its viewers back in"
Me being a FNaF fan lookin' for music box for my fan-game project and choosing most unsettlingly calming sound as sign of player's nearest terrible death.
These "EAS Alarms" (In which the Emergency Alert System is an American only system that was launched in 1997) are all fake. There are exceptions like Poland's radio chime, which is just My Pierwsza Brygada played on a piano recorded in low quality, and Germany's chime, which is from a German number station (As heard here ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GUQUD3IMbb4.html ), but the rest are just music box recordings taken from online.
The ones that scared me the most: (Gold Throphy) 1st: Germany EAS From 1945 ( Aluminum Throphy) 2nd: Poland EAS From 1939 (Orange Concrete Throphy) 3rd: Colombia EAS From 1903 (Dark Throphy: ???th: South Korea EAS From 1950
My grandgrandmother remembers the polish eas alarm, she also saw Hitler.. And to think that my grandgrandmother was only 7 yrs old while the wars.. I still cant belive she is still alive... I live in the part where was the Nazi Germany.. I also can't believe that on a small Island the war just started (on Westerplatte for ppl who don't know)
This makes it more creepy for five nights at Freddy’s because all of the music used to be siren alarm like the UK, Saudi Arabia and the Philipines It freaks me out
Germany: Who Wants Ice Cream? Argentina: I Don't Want It Thank You Germany: Ok Vietnam: Me Me Me! Germany: Ok Vietnam: Can I Have An Strawberry Ice Cream? Germany: Ok Here You Go! Vietnam: Thanks Germany: Your Welcome Poland: Can I Have That Too? Germany: Ok What Flavor? Poland: Blueberry! Germany: Ok Here You Go Poland: Thanks! Germany: Your Welcome! The End!
All of these are fake, argentina has sick 2022 beat, and saudi arabia is just mr incredible meme, but the polish one well it was just 'the jingle' of the Polish radio in the 1930s, but the history behind it goes a little deeper than this, so read on if you're interested. The collection of notes you're hearing comes from a Polish army song titled "Pierwsza brygada" (still considered the anthem of the Polish armed forces to this day). It sounds ethereal and maybe even creepy to some, because of the poor quality of radio transmissions at the time, but is actually just played on a normal piano. It was introduced in 1935 in honour of Marshal Piłsudski, following his death, in May of that year. An important thing to keep in mind is that in the 1930s radio technology was far less advanced and instead of having a national radio station (never mind several) people would just tune in to whichever radio tower was closest to them. The most important of these towers was 'Warsaw 1' which used this sound from 1935 to 6 September 1939. This is what people heard on the morning of 1 September 1939 right before the announcement of the German invasion of Poland. on 6 September, the station was blown up by the Polish army to prevent the invading Germans from taking over the Polish airways once they would inevitably reach the radio tower. From that point on, the broadcasts were made from 'Warsaw 2' which used a different jingle (in fact it was the one used by Warsaw 1 before the switch in 1935). The old jingle was taken from Chopin's Polonaise op. 40 no.1 in A major. This is the sound most associated with Polish war time radio, This is the sound most associated with Polish war time radio, as that was the jingle which preceded the final announcement Warsaw made before the Germans took control of the tower.
1:47 hi im from the uk!! me and my sister used to own wind up jewellery boxes that played this sound, idk if it actually is an eas alarm but it unlocked a childhood memory lol
Columbia: Goodnight, My Baby Germany: Come get your Ice Cream! Saudi Arabia and UK: FNAF Vibes South Korea: MTV is blasting music. Philippines: Why? Cyprus: More ice cream!