i think the reason this song plays during chapter 14 is because jacket is thinking about the colonel’s remark of how “we’re all animals inside, and deep down, we all enjoy violence”. i also think it’s the reason he gives the club owner such a brutal beatdown for seemingly little reason
Dude, i know i came to know your music through Hotline Miami,and its hard disassociate it from, but thanks to it, ive found some bangers in your music! Visitors and Sketch are two of my favorite albums, so thank you!
@@Papu49_el_de_steam Where is... the dj ? "The DJ ? We put his ass in the led stage--" "Wait... who are you" ...... "Letme put it in a language you can understand 'Oh so sori, dis private party. You deliver wrong place' " ...... _1X 800PTS Exposure_
I just came to listen to this song after all this time,, basically the same for me.. Hotline Miami was one of the first indie games I ever played. I still love it so much~
sometimes I wonder how 50 blessings was never discovered by more people. like, people start mass murdering the russian mob and nobody even thinks to investigate the extremely obvious anti-russian organisation?
@@Dibdab9303 I still don't get why Biker did nothing with all that information. He just fucked off into the desert after figuring everything out. The logical assumption would be that Biker was scared that he would be hunted down... but that does not fit his character whatsoever.
@sinth6272 Hi, lore expert here. Biker is almost certainly dead. Or at least that's my theory. Narratively, his story is all about how sacrificing everything for the sake of finding answers will ultimately lead to you having nothing left. If this synopsis sounds familiar, that's because it's the exact same as Evan's theme in Wrong Number. Biker only really appears to Evan and is never acknowledged by anyone else in the story. Similar to Richard, he's a specter; a warning to Evan about where his path leads if he chooses to pursue the truth at the expense of his family.
Wanna know something funny Scattle? I found you randomly playing a whole different rogue light you weren’t apart of( dead cells) and when the crossover for hotline Miami came out I got curious, I never played hotline so I bought both and your music has creeped into my playlists ever since
I thought it was cool it was hinted that the Jacket actually did get the right location to get vengeance on the people behind the phone calls from the police files, but didn’t quite catch the Janitor’s secret hideout in the club. And when Biker confronts the Janitors, the first floor of Resolution is a lightly altered version of the first room of Vengeance, and this music plays throughout.
@@green5260 The first couple of rooms in Resolution are extremely similar to Vengeance, Inner Animal plays in both levels, there exists other similar address fuckups in other levels, and if you find out the password Biker tells the Janitors it was clever setting up their operations from enemy territory. In the sequel, the Police Chief also mentions that the phone calls Jacket got were traced to the club present in Vengeance and Resolution as well.
Actually, the addresses for each level are flashed at the start. It's not the same location. The Golden Truckstop is at South 86th Street, while the Janitors' base is at North 87th Street. Jacket was lead to believe that the mafia was attacking itself because the police traced the calls to the Golden Truckstop. We learn during Safehouse that 50 Blessings coerced a computer expert to change where the calls could be traced to out of PhoneHom. Also, all of Biker's story probably didn't happen. It's my personal theory that Biker was wine drunk ever since the intro to Prankcall and he hallucinates everything afterwards. It makes stuff in HM2 make more sense.
@@lotuseater2184 Both stories are canon, but they're both unreliable narrators. Biker's still alive in HM2, and he's even in Miami. If you look carefully at the intro to First Trial, you see him standing with Ash and Alex at Jacket's trial. That being said, the game portrays Jacket's POV while he's in a coma, which we've seen literally changes to stuff that never happened at times. Biker was also probably on drugs during the fight as evident to the intro of the Phonehom mission, where it's hinted that he had a party at his place the night before. Both assumed that they killed the other, but in reality, both lived. This makes sense even from a story standpoint in the first game as 1) Jacket started being sent on harder and more lethal missions right after presumably failing to kill the Biker, culminating to the janitors sending Richter after him, and 2) the death threats that the Biker receives in the intro to his missions. That being said, I need to play through HM 1 again. Everyone bringing up the addresses and the minor building alterations might play more into the unreliable narrator aspect.