This is probably the best song from all of the OST versions of Soul Blade! Literally used to play this song everyday after school, loudly LOL. Great times.
Kaphwan is My Cousin's Based Character Daniel could have Played As Him in a Movie He did Tae Kwon Do He needs a Ring Name to have Him as His Based Character He use to Look like Him
I'm surprised after all these years that no one has mentioned where the "I love it" sample was from: World's Famous Supreme Team's 'Buffalo Gals' , it's at 4 minute 40 second into the song ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KUcfitEe-Aw.html
Everytime this one came on I was always humming it, it was so difficult not to try to imitate the end (dun dun dun dun dun dun dun) sorry people that's the best I can do😁😁
@@hayatorpg3896 They should put him in the same Soul Calibur Games on Playstation 2 Xbox 260 Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 in the 3rd 4th 5th 6th & 7th that can't stay off of PS3 & 360
I know this is a year old but... "Seong" is the correct spelling according to the South Korean standard Revised Romanization. "Eu" (Hangul ㅡ ) and "eo" (Hangul ㅓ ) are different vowels. "Eu" is pronounced kind of like the "oo" in "foot", whereas "eo" is pronounced like English "uh" or "aw" depending on where you're from. Seong (or Song in the old spelling) is an old Korean family name that dates way back. Seung is also a surname but is very, very uncommon compared to Seong. The thing is, since Japanese only has five vowels, but Korean has ten, they can't really make the distinction well when written in kana. As far as Mi-na versus Mina, the custom is to hyphenate when there could be ambiguity to pronunciation or Hangul spelling. For example, Mina could be Min-a (민아) or Mi-na (미나). The intent was Mi-na, so that's how they spell it.
Why didn't they spell her name as Seong Mi-na in the first place if that's the correct spelling? If I were one of the staff members, I would spell it as Seong Mi-na just to keep things consistent.
I am seven years late to the answer, but it was a mistake that happened when they romanized the korean vowels. Nobody caught the issue at the time, probably because "Seung" actually is a korean word that means victory and not some nonsense that would be obviously not right.
@@blackbokuto This should be her new theme in the 7th Soul Calibur Game on Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 with challenges only for Die Hard Conservative Republican Populist Christian Fans instead right here and now