Game Audio Pipeline Asbjoern Andersen


Whether you're working on large or small game projects, getting your game audio pipeline right is essential for a smooth-running development process - and to help you do that, Mads Vesterager Riddersholm and Jeppe Emil Lindskov have written this useful guide for you:
Written by Mads Vesterager Riddersholm and Jeppe Emil Lindskov
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Animal Hyperrealism IV Is Here!
 

Motivation

In the last year of our bachelor’s degree, we were both working full time at different game developers in Copenhagen. We started as interns, but we were responsible for most/all audio-related work at these studios. Without previous experience working in the industry, we quickly realized the importance of pipeline development. If you are not thinking carefully about your workflow, how you organize your project, and what tools you need, it will slow progress and cause problems during production. Even in small studios working on small games.

If you are not thinking carefully about your workflow, how you organize your project, and what tools you need, it will slow progress and cause problems during production.

But how should we learn the forbidden arts of game audio pipeline development? The College we attended didn’t provide us with much knowledge on the subject, and while a lot of available information can be found on how to make sound design for video games, not much can be found on the subject of creating an efficient workflow and pipelines.

After a lot of research on the subject, we decided that we wanted to write our own guide on game audio pipeline development. We then managed to get in contact with some of the best and most experienced audio directors and audio professionals in the industry. The thesis is based on the information they provided us, combined with our own experience and curiosity.

In this article, we want to highlight parts of the thesis that we believe can help new people in the industry as well as those trying to find their way into it.

 

Game Audio Pipeline

But what is a pipeline?

In its most basic form, a pipeline is a chain of processes. The chain is arranged so that the output of each element is fed straight into the input of the next. Much like a real physical transport pipeline.

So what does a game audio pipeline look like? The most basic form of game audio pipeline starts with a concept and stops when that concept can be heard by the player in-game. It could look like this:

GameAudioPipeline-1

This model is very simplified. But the fundamental idea is: Create a pipeline which is as frictionless as possible. In return, the pipeline will provide the sound designer with the best possible creative environment — from asset creation, to implementation, to iteration, to finished product.
 

Pre-production

The production of a video game starts with pre-production. This is the initial phase where the team will come together and scope, plan, and conceptualize the project. This is done to prove out pipelines, team dynamics and metrics.

This is also the phase in which you want to include the audio department and start developing a game audio pipeline.

Pre-production usually ends with a demo or prototype of the game. This is also the phase in which you want to include the audio department and start developing a game audio pipeline.

Unfortunately, there is a tendency at some game developers to think of audio as part of post-production. This might be because of economy, lack of experience, or an old echo from film production. No matter the reason, excluding audio from pre-production is going to have consequences for the production and the final product.

There are three major reasons to include the sound designers from day one:

Having the audio pipeline thought through, laid out, and proven at the beginning of a project provides higher planning stability and a more reliable schedule without last-minute surprises.

1. Having sound designers join early makes it possible to define an audio identity for the game. An audio identity is usually designed on multiple factors, like the vision of the game, the concept art and genre. This also goes the other way around. If the concept artist has access to ambience tracks and/or music it will help them build a stronger and more thorough visual identity for the game. Worst-case scenario is the audio identity being defined by somebody other than the audio department. This is likely to create problems down the road.

2. When having sound designers join the pre-production, they are not only there to talk audio. Being an audio specialist, working with video games makes you an expert in making games. Not only are you developing games, you are also passionate about games. Your opinion about anything in a feature is valid. Every person in pre-production is there to understand and reinforce the vision and to share their experiences for the sake of the game.

3. Creating a pipeline is a planning process. Deciding on every aspect as early as possible is going to save time and make the process of creating a video game more transparent for everybody involved. Having the audio pipeline thought through, laid out, and proven at the beginning of a project provides higher planning stability and a more reliable schedule without last-minute surprises. It also gives audio design and audio technology the time to build a trustworthy collaboration.
 

Game audio tools

A very important technical aspect of creating a good pipeline is the creation of tools for the sound designer to use. Tools do not necessarily have to belong in the game engine. Many tools are developed for other parts of the game audio pipeline, like exporting and importing tools between DAW and Middleware.

The main point is to facilitate the flow from what is in the sound designers head all the way to what the player experiences in the game.

In a way, a tool can be seen as the thing in a pipeline that makes it run smoothly from concept to implementation. The main point is to facilitate the flow from what is in the sound designers head all the way to what the player experiences in the game.

The amount and types of tools needed are different, depending on the game and the studio. Tools can be shared across multiple projects, especially if the same Middleware and game engine is being used. But it is important to constantly review and evaluate which tools are needed and how to improve on existing tools. The idea is to always be aware of what works and what doesn’t. If the need for a new tool arises, it gets added to the technical backlog and prioritized depending on how urgent it is. This way a company can be aware of what problems lie ahead and be able to react in time.


Popular on A Sound Effect right now - article continues below:


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    Animal Hyperrealism Vol IV is a sound library containing animal vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 2000 individual sounds in 294 files. The sounds were recorded in zoos, and wildlife centers.

    The asset list includes but is not limited to: hippos, hyenas, vultures, dwarf mongooses, elephants, African cranes, parrots, tigers, pigmy hippos, rhea ostriches, brown bears, pheasants, wildebeests, African wild dogs and many more. The content has been recorded at 192KHz with a Sanken CO100K, an Avisoft CMPA and a Sennheiser 8050 for center plus two Sennheiser MKH8040 for stereo image.

    The resulting ultrasonic spectrum is rich and allows for truly extreme manipulation of the content.

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  • Bundles Mattia Cellotto – Complete Bundle Play Track 13100+ sounds included $1,162

    Mattia Cellotto’s extraordinary sound libraries are some of the most popular releases in independent sound effects – and here’s your chance to get them all at a nice discount. Here’s what’s you get:

    NEW: ANIMAL HYPERREALISM IV contains animal vocalisations – from hippos, hyenas, vultures, dwarf mongooses, elephants, African cranes, parrots, tigers, pigmy hippos, rhea ostriches, to brown bears, pheasants, wildebeests, African wild dogs and many more. Features 2000 individual sounds in 294 files.
     

    CATACLYSM is a collection more than 1400 sounds in 400+ files of recorded, synthesized and designed sounds created to support important destructive moments and add a stronger sense of extreme consequence to any sound.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL I is a library containing themed animal vocalisations & sounds, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 1300 individual sounds in 290 files.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL II is a library containing themed animal sounds & vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 2000 individual sounds in 283 files.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL III is a library containing sounds themed animal vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 1700 individual sounds in 279 files.
     

    METAMORPHOSIS is a huge collection of recorded source, synthesized material and hybrid sounds – more than 2300 sounds total.
     

    GLACIER ICE is a library containing over 300 high quality sounds of ice cracking, breaking, shattering in various sizes of blocks – recorded entirely in the Italian Alps over the course of two winters.
     

    POLARITY delivers more than 950 sounds of electricity, science and technology – captured in several locations around the world, from electricity museums to science labs.
     

    ULTRASONIC DRY ICE is a library containing over 600 sounds themed metal resonances, scrapes and all sorts of weird.
     

    ROCKS MOMENTUM gets you more than 1100 sounds of rocks, bricks, wood logs, stones, impacting on different surfaces, rolling, being scraped one against the other and so on. The library was recorded in the Italian alps, and in Inverness, Scotland.
     

    WATER VOLUMES delivers you over 300 sounds of natural hot-springs, bubbles, and liquids of various densities boiling under the effect of dry ice.
     

    METAL GROANS AND SLAMS is a library for which metal was kicked, hammered, bowed and… induced to vibrate through feedback loops?! The collection features 346 unique sounds recorded through field trips in US, UK and Italy.
     

    CRUNCH MODE & THE BORAX EXPERIMENT are also included as a bonus: Crunch Mode features 230 crunchy sounds made with a variety of vegetables, fresh bread, pizza crust & frozen goods, and The Borax Experiment gets you 158 squishy, gory, slimy, gooey SFX.
     

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    GEARBOX:
    Boutique analog mechanical contraptions, steampunk gadgetry, gizmos and machines big and small.


    SORCERY:
    Spells, deflects, casts, blocks, beams, and more. Unrivaled wizardry at your fingertips.


    BROKEN
    Car crashes, explosions, crumbling buildings, earthquakes, ripping earth and metal, to debris, and more.


    HERO:
    HERO – Sword fights, stabbing, guillotines, impaling, battle cries, shields, drawbridges, armor, foley and more.


    MELEE:
    Punches, kicks, blocks, bodyfalls, grabs, slaps, bone breaks, blood splatters, and more.


    SCI FI:
    Spaceships, machines, mechanicals, weapons and more. Technologies exceeding your boldest visions of the future.


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    The ultimate Game UI SFX library including clicks, pops, whooshes, musical and tonal elements, and ready to use designs for every UI action and game style.


    COLLISION:
    The ultimate sound effects library for massive impact sounds. Stingers, crashes, hits, whooshes and fully designed impact effects.


    4 ELEMENTS:
    Harness the raw power of fire, water, earth, and air with over 3000 elemental sounds crafted for limitless creativity.


    OVERKILL:
    Unleash pure audio carnage with OVERKILL – a brutally detailed 5.7 GB sound library featuring 3390 hyperreal gore sound effects across 607 files.


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    Featuring over 800 files, Hyper Thunder spans everything from subtle distant rumbles and rolling thunder to razor-sharp lightning strikes and earth-shaking impacts. With both designed hits and source layers, you have full control—drop in ready-to-use power or sculpt your own stormscapes using the source recordings.

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  • PLANES & HELICOPTERS contains flybys, takeoffs, and landings of 13 aircraft models and 5 helicopter models, including small and medium-range passenger planes, private jets, tiny planes and firefighting aircraft. Recorded as close as possible to the aircraft, in airports. You’ll find turbojet, turboprop, and propeller-powered aircrafts. You’ll also find military and civilian helicopters sound effects.
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    All files are recorded 32bit, 192 kHz, with RØDE NTG1, Line Audio Omni1 and FEL Clippy XLR EM272 microphones, Sound Devices MixPre-6 II recorder. Library contains wav files of driving, interior and exterior foley, mechanical and electrical sounds. It is only available in UCS.

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    What’s inside:

    • APU start ups, takeoffs, landings, and hovering sequences.
    • Close and medium imposing fly-bys
    • Interior and Exterior perspectives
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Need specific sound effects? Try a search below:


Through our interviews we have found some common guidelines that a good tool should adhere to:

1) The tool should try and ease one or several pain points in the pipeline.

This could be reducing the complexity of a task or reducing the number of clicks needed to perform an action. The first task when designing a tool is to sit down and ask yourself, “What are you trying to archive?”

If the creation of the tool requires help from a programmer, it is essential to focus on the problem you are trying to solve, not necessarily the solution you have in mind.

2) The tool should be able to speak the language of the user and help the user fulfill their creative potential.

It is important that tools are easily understood by the people using them, e.g. making sure UI/UX is intuitive and that features are named accordingly to what they do. Otherwise, it might cause user frustration.

3) The tool should be expandable and be able to be constantly iterated on.

The tool should likewise be granular and easy to update and maintain. Tools will often times be developed early in production, so they need to be flexible, be able to evolve and embrace potential problems that might arise later in the pipeline.

Below we included a playlist of all the tools we made for out bachelor thesis:



Wwise Unity Tools - Sound Painter


Wwise Unity Tools – Sound Painter

 

Organization, transparency and naming convention

When developing your pipeline, it is important to plan out how you want to organize your project from day one. The areas that we have covered so far are all elements of this organization.

Another very important part of pipeline development is to make the workflow as frictionless as possible. An important part of making the pipeline frictionless is to make the pipeline transparent.

An important part of making the pipeline frictionless is to make the pipeline transparent.

To make the pipeline transparent, first of all you need to organize and come to an agreement with both the audio team and everybody else involved in the process of the game audio pipeline on how the pipeline is going to be executed.

This involves documentation, creating a consistent naming convention (which we will talk about shortly) — what format should different types of assets be exported as, what is the hierarchy structure in the Middleware, folders, engine, etc., and what tools are available, what should be built, and how should they be used and integrated into the pipelines of other departments.

Gustav Rathsman from DICE uses the term “One True Source,” which is a great way of describing this need for coherence and transparency throughout a project. He says, “That is a classic problem, where people have different sources of truth and then you end up with something that doesn’t align in the end.”

The keyword here is communication. Communication is absolutely essential to keeping everyone in the loop on what is happening. Having all of the above-mentioned steps laid out as early as possible makes the project and the pipeline way more transparent. It makes it much easier to adapt to changes and when something breaks (and something will break), having a transparent project is going to make the problem solving much easier.

‘Naming conventions’ is a funny buzzword in audio production and game development. Having a naming convention and sticking to it all the way through production is very important. There is no golden solution when deciding upon a naming convention. But a good naming convention should follow these guidelines:

1. Make it very clear what the asset or file is and what it is connected to.

2. Have it appear in sorted order, for easy search and browsing.

An example could look like this:
Category_Subcategory_Name_Layer_VariationNumber

Using this convention in your Middleware hierarchy and/or folder structure is also very beneficial, as you can use it to easily navigate and find the path of certain assets when looking in the profiler.

We also put together a nifty set of tools that you can use to easily name and import assets from Reaper into Wwise:



Reaper Export Workflow


Reaper Export Workflow

 

Conclusion

It is important to emphasize the fact that first of all, there is no right way of building a pipeline. It is rather a question of making the decision on how to do it.

Secondly, there is much more going into the development of a pipeline then what we have been able to present in this article and in our thesis.

When developing a pipeline that is going to stay organized, transparent, and stick to the idea of One True Source, having audio be part of pre-production is vital. It is impossible to prepare for every situation, but having outlined and tested the pipeline is going to provide higher planning stability.

There is no universal answer to a perfect pipeline. A pipeline is developed through experience, trial and error.

That being said, being part of pre-production is also a question of acknowledging everybody working in the game industry as being experts in video games. The knowledge they bring to the production is more than just their field of expertise.

The hardest part of working with a determined pipeline is keeping it consistent if things should change, which inevitably will happen. There is no universal answer to a perfect pipeline. A pipeline is developed through experience, trial and error. That is also why it is important to be aware of how you are working, what steps you need to go through from A to B, and then try to find ways of improving it. Time spend working against the pipeline, is time you could have spent on being creative. In the end, that is what the player experiences.

 

Acknowledgement

We would like to express our sincerest gratitude to Ben Minto, Gustav Rathsman, Guy Somberg, Jonas Breum Jensen, Lydia Andrew, Rob Bridgett and Stephen Hodde. Without your contribution the thesis and this article wouldn’t have been possible.

 

Outro

In this article, we have tried to touch on a couple of important areas of pipeline development. It is impossible to cover all aspects in the length of an article. If you want a bigger insight, please access the thesis via our websites. The thesis also includes a case study using Reaper, Wwise, and Unity, which showcases various workflow and pipeline tools. It might help you contextualize the idea of tool development.

If you have any questions feel free to reach out to us.

Mads Vesterager Riddersholm
https://www.madsriddersholm.com/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/madsriddersholm/

contact@madsriddersholm.com

Jeppe Emil Lindskov
https://www.idosounddesign.com/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeppelindskov/

https://twitter.com/idosounddesign

 
A big thanks to Mads Vesterager Riddersholm and Jeppe Emil Lindskov for giving us a look at Game Audio Pipelines!

 

Please share this:


 



 
 
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A Sound Effect gives you easy access to an absolutely huge sound effects catalog from a myriad of independent sound creators, all covered by one license agreement - a few highlights:

  • Bundles Mattia Cellotto – Complete Bundle Play Track 13100+ sounds included $1,162

    Mattia Cellotto’s extraordinary sound libraries are some of the most popular releases in independent sound effects – and here’s your chance to get them all at a nice discount. Here’s what’s you get:

    NEW: ANIMAL HYPERREALISM IV contains animal vocalisations – from hippos, hyenas, vultures, dwarf mongooses, elephants, African cranes, parrots, tigers, pigmy hippos, rhea ostriches, to brown bears, pheasants, wildebeests, African wild dogs and many more. Features 2000 individual sounds in 294 files.
     

    CATACLYSM is a collection more than 1400 sounds in 400+ files of recorded, synthesized and designed sounds created to support important destructive moments and add a stronger sense of extreme consequence to any sound.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL I is a library containing themed animal vocalisations & sounds, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 1300 individual sounds in 290 files.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL II is a library containing themed animal sounds & vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 2000 individual sounds in 283 files.
     

    ANIMAL HYPERREALISM VOL III is a library containing sounds themed animal vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 1700 individual sounds in 279 files.
     

    METAMORPHOSIS is a huge collection of recorded source, synthesized material and hybrid sounds – more than 2300 sounds total.
     

    GLACIER ICE is a library containing over 300 high quality sounds of ice cracking, breaking, shattering in various sizes of blocks – recorded entirely in the Italian Alps over the course of two winters.
     

    POLARITY delivers more than 950 sounds of electricity, science and technology – captured in several locations around the world, from electricity museums to science labs.
     

    ULTRASONIC DRY ICE is a library containing over 600 sounds themed metal resonances, scrapes and all sorts of weird.
     

    ROCKS MOMENTUM gets you more than 1100 sounds of rocks, bricks, wood logs, stones, impacting on different surfaces, rolling, being scraped one against the other and so on. The library was recorded in the Italian alps, and in Inverness, Scotland.
     

    WATER VOLUMES delivers you over 300 sounds of natural hot-springs, bubbles, and liquids of various densities boiling under the effect of dry ice.
     

    METAL GROANS AND SLAMS is a library for which metal was kicked, hammered, bowed and… induced to vibrate through feedback loops?! The collection features 346 unique sounds recorded through field trips in US, UK and Italy.
     

    CRUNCH MODE & THE BORAX EXPERIMENT are also included as a bonus: Crunch Mode features 230 crunchy sounds made with a variety of vegetables, fresh bread, pizza crust & frozen goods, and The Borax Experiment gets you 158 squishy, gory, slimy, gooey SFX.
     

    15 %
    OFF
    Ends 1759874399
  • Bundles The Vault – The Ultimate RTSB Bundle Play Track 29683 sounds included, 2459 mins total $1,159

    The whole 9 yards.
    Comprised of 11 heavy hitting libraries, this bundle includes SEISMIC CORE, OVERKILL, 4 ELEMENTS, COLLISION, INTERACTIVE, SCI FI, GEARBOX, SORCERY, HERO, BROKEN, and MELEE. Save by bundling all ELEVEN in a single library.

    GEARBOX:
    Boutique analog mechanical contraptions, steampunk gadgetry, gizmos and machines big and small.


    SORCERY:
    Spells, deflects, casts, blocks, beams, and more. Unrivaled wizardry at your fingertips.


    BROKEN
    Car crashes, explosions, crumbling buildings, earthquakes, ripping earth and metal, to debris, and more.


    HERO:
    HERO – Sword fights, stabbing, guillotines, impaling, battle cries, shields, drawbridges, armor, foley and more.


    MELEE:
    Punches, kicks, blocks, bodyfalls, grabs, slaps, bone breaks, blood splatters, and more.


    SCI FI:
    Spaceships, machines, mechanicals, weapons and more. Technologies exceeding your boldest visions of the future.


    INTERACTIVE:
    The ultimate Game UI SFX library including clicks, pops, whooshes, musical and tonal elements, and ready to use designs for every UI action and game style.


    COLLISION:
    The ultimate sound effects library for massive impact sounds. Stingers, crashes, hits, whooshes and fully designed impact effects.


    4 ELEMENTS:
    Harness the raw power of fire, water, earth, and air with over 3000 elemental sounds crafted for limitless creativity.


    OVERKILL:
    Unleash pure audio carnage with OVERKILL – a brutally detailed 5.7 GB sound library featuring 3390 hyperreal gore sound effects across 607 files.


    SEISMIC CORE:
    Unleash raw sonic power with SEISMIC CORE – a meticulously crafted 1.62 GB sound library featuring 548 impact-driven sound effects across 108 files.


    25 %
    OFF
  • ⏰ For a very limited time:
    Add this library to the cart and enter ah4launch in the cart coupon field – to sprinkle an extra launch discount, on top of the current discount!

    Animal Hyperrealism Vol IV is a sound library containing animal vocalisations, from real to designed creatures totaling more than 2000 individual sounds in 294 files. The sounds were recorded in zoos, and wildlife centers.

    The asset list includes but is not limited to: hippos, hyenas, vultures, dwarf mongooses, elephants, African cranes, parrots, tigers, pigmy hippos, rhea ostriches, brown bears, pheasants, wildebeests, African wild dogs and many more. The content has been recorded at 192KHz with a Sanken CO100K, an Avisoft CMPA and a Sennheiser 8050 for center plus two Sennheiser MKH8040 for stereo image.

    The resulting ultrasonic spectrum is rich and allows for truly extreme manipulation of the content.

    15 %
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Explore the full, unique collection here

Latest sound effects libraries:
 
  • All files are recorded 32bit, 192 kHz, with RØDE NTG1, Line Audio Omni1 and FEL Clippy XLR EM272 microphones, Sound Devices MixPre-6 II & Zoom F3 recorders. Library contains wav files of driving, foley, mechanical and electrical sounds. It is only available in UCS.

  • PLANES & HELICOPTERS contains flybys, takeoffs, and landings of 13 aircraft models and 5 helicopter models, including small and medium-range passenger planes, private jets, tiny planes and firefighting aircraft. Recorded as close as possible to the aircraft, in airports. You’ll find turbojet, turboprop, and propeller-powered aircrafts. You’ll also find military and civilian helicopters sound effects.
    The sounds can be used for a realistic purpose but you can design spaceships or futuristic vehicles.

    13 %
    OFF
  • Car Sound Effects Lada Riva 1980 compact car Play Track 218 sounds included, 51 mins total $65

    All files are recorded 32bit, 192 kHz, with RØDE NTG1, Line Audio Omni1 and FEL Clippy XLR EM272 microphones, Sound Devices MixPre-6 II recorder. Library contains wav files of driving, interior and exterior foley, mechanical and electrical sounds. It is only available in UCS.

  • Electricity Sound Effects Fridge Hums Complete Bundle Play Track 60 sounds included, 130 mins total $24

    A comprehensive fridge hum library with 60 sounds / 2+ hours of hums, buzzes, beeps, industrial room tones, clicks, drips and more

    20 %
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  • Helicopter Sound Effects CH-47 Chinook Helicopter Play Track 40 sounds included, 46 mins total $80

    This library delivers the raw power of this legendary military transport helicopter. Originally recorded for the acclaimed Netflix series Money Heist: Part 5, this library captures every rotor, engine, and maneuver with pristine detail and fidelity—now available for your own productions.

    From the thunderous rotor blades slicing through the air, to the deep roar of its twin turbines, and the massive fly-bys that shake the ground, this collection delivers 46 minutes of sounds from one of the most iconic helicopters in history.

    Recorded using a multi-mic setup, every nuance has been preserved – from the hurricane-like rotor wash to the natural echoes bouncing across the runway and hangars. This library is a perfect fit for war films, military documentaries, AAA video games, or any production in need of authentic and cinematic helicopter power.

    What’s inside:

    • APU start ups, takeoffs, landings, and hovering sequences.
    • Close and medium imposing fly-bys
    • Interior and Exterior perspectives
    • Fully edited and UCS-compliant metadata for fast and easy search

    With CH-47 CHINOOK, you’ll have a rock-solid, versatile, and epic sound resource at your fingertips – ready to take your projects to the next level.

    Note: The SoundCloud demo contains radio communiactions and some cockpit switches. These are not included.

    20 %
    OFF

   

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