20

Castlevania: Dracula X by Tomoya Tomita, Masanari Iwata, Harumi Ueko, Masahiko Kimura

25

Codename: ICEMAN by Mark Seibert / Sierra

8

Commander Keen 4: Secret of the Oracle by Robert Prince Music for Commander Keen IV fits perfectly with the game. It's lighthearted and upbeat, just like the game itself. Bobby Prince wrote the music from ground up for the Sound Blaster FM synthesizer since the availabilit...

4

Conan: The Cimmerian by Christopher Barker

23

CyClones by Kevin Schilder

20

Dark Seed (Amiga) by Matt Nathan / Dreamers Guild

3

Darkmere: The Nightmare's Begun by Martin Iveson

8

Defender of the Crown by Jim Cuomo / Cinemaware

15

Destruction Derby by Tim Swan & Elliot Sumner

41

Deus Ex by Alexander Brandon The soundtrack of Deus Ex, composed by Alexander Brandon (primary contributor, including main theme), Dan Gardopée ("Naval Base" and "Vandenberg"), Michiel van den Bos ("UNATCO", "Lebedev's Airfield", "Airfield Actio...

23

Doom by Robert Prince All of Doom's music was composed by Robert "Bobby" Prince. The fourth episode added in The Ultimate Doom did not include any new tracks and only used songs from the first three episodes. Many of the songs were inspire...

21

Doom II: Hell on Earth by Robert Prince The soundtrack of Doom 2 was composed by Robert "Bobby" Prince. Some of these tracks are known to have originally been written for Doom. Two of the tracks are re-adapted by Prince from his earlier work on Wolfenstein ...

9

Double Dragon (Original soundtrack) by Kazunaka Yamane

11

Dragonflight by Jochen Hippel

8

Drakan: Order of the Flame by Tim Ebling, Barry Leitch

5

Dreamweb (Amiga) by Matt Seldon / Creative Reality

16

Dune (Audio CD) by Stéphane Picq / Cryo Soundtrack for Dune was composed by a French artist Stéphane Picq. Working with programmer and Cryo co-founder, Remi Herbulot, he came up with HERAD, a music tool for the FM soundcard AdLib, which allowed t...

32

Dune 2: The Building of a Dynasty by Frank Klepacki / Westwood Music for Dune II was composed by Frank Klepacki and arranged by Dwight Okahara. Music source: DOS version of the game, recorded using Roland MT-32 emulator.

RetroGamer's Music Collection

 There are music tracks from the good old 90' video games, mostly on Amiga and PC (DOS) platforms. Music comes from multiple sources, from simple Chiptunes (Arcade, NES) through digital synthesis and sampling (Amiga), MIDI (Adlib,  Roland MT-32, General MIDI) to the complete pre-recorded CD Audio tracks (late 90' games or remastered releases).

Video game music in general

 Early video game music was once limited to simple melodies of early sound synthesizer technology. These limitations inspired the style of music known as chiptunes, which combines simple melodic styles with more complex patterns or traditional music styles, and became the most popular sound of the first video games.

With advances in technology, video game music has grown to include the same breadth and complexity associated with television and film scores, allowing for much more creative freedom. While simple synthesizer pieces are still common, game music now includes full orchestral pieces and popular music. Music in video games can be heard over a game's title screen, menus, as well as during the entire gameplay.Modern soundtracks can also change depending on a player's actions or situation, such as indicating missed actions in rhythm games.