I remember the first time encountering Deionarra in the halls; if you wander close enough to her, it triggers this music to play and I would just stop to listen and watch her lonely figure left suspended and waiting, as if time itself had abandoned her. I knew then that I was to become a part of a story that was both hauntingly beautiful and tragically sad.
Honestly, what other choice did he have? Using deionarra was the most expedient way to ensure that he would get help at the fortress of regrets. TNO probably would have been completely fucked if she did not rescue her fro the trap. If your gonna hate on him, at least consider his options, if he had any in the first place.
touching Deionarra's sensory stone was one of my favorite moments in my gaming history. If only other games had half the amount of depth and drama of just that one moment! Love it!
I Shall Wait for You in Death's Halls, My Love... One of the best games I played on the computer growing up. Ironically the game was given to me by my brother's dad as a birthday present. He got it at a swap meet and apologized to me because he couldn't buy me something more expensive. Little did he know 11 years later, I still have and love this game. I consider myself lucky to have been able to play such an amazing game like this. Too bad not many others know of it's beautiful storyline =(
"You! What is it that brings you here?! Have you come to see first-hand the misery you have wrought? Perhaps in death I still hold some shred of use for you...?" Her voice drops into a hiss. "...'my love.'" Awesome, the price doesn't always matter, more the gesture and the quality! This is one of my favourite ever stories.
"If there is anything I have learned in my travels across the Planes, it is that many things may change the nature of a man. Whether regret, or love, or revenge or fear - whatever you believe can change the nature of a man, can. I’ve seen belief move cities, make men stave off death, and turn an evil hag's heart half-circle. This entire Fortress has been constructed from belief. Belief damned a woman, whose heart clung to the hope that another loved her when he did not."
This is by far the most beautiful story in computer gaming. It feels like reading a book, but not just any book bu rather an amazing book at the level of The Lord of the Rings.
This is not on the list of the best games I've ever played. Because this was not just a computer game. Those who never experienced will never understand.
+surobakianinpo yes, from this "journey", we learn a new interpretation regarding love, friendship, loyalty, duty and most important , redemption and forgiveness
+Michal Bukvai I would say "Love" ..... It is not limited to the Love of a lady, but in fact it is the love of Life, the original Immortal love the life that he lives so he wants to remain on the plane, and for that he regret the wrongs that he did.. The Nameless one who i play simply cherish the friends, allies and people who he met in his life, he loves them all and the experience of travelling with them , he also loves the encounter with Deionarra, and hence he did all he can to "change" his former nature of Evil into a Good person...I remember he even comment after one of the quest to help the old man and his wife from the Dustman "As long as i am here, i will change the rule of nature, the perception that no one will simply help someone without asking for rewards"
@@michalbukvai7548 Acquiring new qualias, I guess. Having five wits is good, but the day when progress will find a way to equip people with more of those, will be truly a great day. Because, the more wider and complicated our perception will get, the less human-like our mental processes will be.
Thanks for this theme from the best game ever. A game I have had to play again and again every couple years since its release, a game that never grows old or die, just like the Nameless.
@@viktorskarlatov8227 I could tell you, but I'd have to kill you... Montaron died, it was a very bloody affair, we had lobsters in avocado sauce afterwards.
"YOU!!! What is it that brings _you_ here?! Have you come to see firsthand the misery you've wrought? Perhaps, even in death, I still hold some shred of use for you... my LOVE."
With the very first note, a massive flood of grievance and regret washed through my whole body. Unbelievable. A mere game, which I have played so many years ago that I have no idea of what its plot was, is still staying in the deep corner of my heart waiting to be provoked again. I can't help but set out for Sigil once more.
Well, I've heard the novel is just not up to par with the writing in the actual game and a lot of it runs contrary to what happens in game as well. Personally, I'd rather not spoil what I know since Chris Avellone had nothing to do with the novelization.
This track, along with the following dialogue between the Nameless One and Dionarra (the first time you meet her, I mean) has to be one of the most emotional experiences I've ever felt in a video game to this date. It almost brought me to tears for real.
It's the first time I notice that on the left end of the logo there is a crying and screaming woman's head. Seeing it and hearing the theme at the same time feels sad.
this song should have been the main theme...it describes the whole feeling of the game, the torment of the planes forever changed by a man who was so afraid of death he managed to cheat it,the regret of his deeds and the pain he brought on others...this piece is a pure art
Poor poor girl... I remember the horror when I realized it was *I* who betrayed her and condemned her to that existence... It still saddens me to no end.
Practical Incarnation, like Tywin Lannister, was a master chessmaster, manipulating everything and everybody to suit his own goal, to get into Fortress of Regrets and end his immortality. He's lawful neutral due to his complete lack of morality - everything he did, he did to get the job done. The ultimate utilitarian. Screwing over Deionarra was definetely one of his most callous actions, but nearly everything is possible in the game thanks to the careful groundwork laid down by Practical Incarnation. Would be easier, if next ones didn't spoil some of his work.
Probably the best game i have ever played and before anyone ask is not nostaliga or anything i played it around 8 months ago. Still wish it was steam , but at least i got the cd home.
+TheDarkCreed86 ah thats right thx. I could ofc but it on gog thx m8. damn this game is good . one of if not the best narrative ever. so underrated. thx for tip
You are correct about Morte. He's voiced by Rob Paulsen who voiced Yakko, as well as Pinky from Pinky and the Brain. The dude has an enormous repertoire!
Best game ever. I played it so many times just to read the dialogs and understand the story line. Best scenario ever. You try to die in this game! So original. Thank you for uploading this song brings back memories. :)
I remember the first time i played Planescape. When i came to Deionarra you could say that the weigth of how important music is finally came down on me. For the first time and the only time i felt totally immmersed into a virtual reality that had such a story to tell. I could almost immediately sense the important relationship the two shared. That scene alone is worth playing the entire game to see it come to fruition in the end.
LOL, I always thought Deionarra's voice sounded so much like Jennifer Hale and recently I found out because she voiced her. The things Internet can search up for you:D
Stupid Chris Avellone just had to go ahead and make stupid Planescape: Torment. Now everything I play (shit, everything I *experience*) has to compare to this.
Κωνσταντίνος Χαραλαμπόπουλος That bastard also made NWN2:MotB! Probably the only game I can compare to this game (even though the depths are less, it's more of a game for me)!
The only competitors I can think of are The Last of Us and Red Dead Redemption 1 & 2 (especially 2). Nier: Automata also has brilliant storytelling, albeit slightly confusing
when morte tells a story of 5 deaths, deionarra's death was the saddest one of them all. they were death of courage for morte, death of belief for dak'kon, death of memory for the nameless one, death of the body for an archer (one of previous companions). deionarra's death was death of grief. man, can such love exist?
@@Rigby350 she loved the nameless one so much she let herself be manupilated by him. And he definitely did not love her. He needed her and discarded her önce he was done with her.
Only second time. Dude, I have replayed it at least several and have started playing again. And even though I know it is a magical game and hold it in such a high regard, each time I am surprised by its beauty.
it's wild that without context see a tattoo of some kind of snake monster reaching upward. then after playing the game all you can see is a crying woman.
I played this game when it first came out, I dunno 10-15 years ago. I actually look back on it quite fondly, because the story and the music connect with me. I look at my life a lot and say, what CAN change the nature of a man? I can only half answer that question for myself. The game really hit home for me, so I'd say it's my favorite game of all time.
i am playing through this game for the first time now, and its so fantastic i cant describe it. when you suddenly realise that you have to make thruthful answers based on yourself the player, not the namelessone. as more and more complex story unfolds. 5/5 easily. to bad nothing like this is ever going to be made in computer game history
As a game, plasnescape torment wasnt very good. Despite that, thanks to the absolute best writing i have seen on a screen of any kind, it is one of the absolute best games i have played these past 20+ years.
Listening to this song, I want to cry. Its just that I'm to happy to cry. Planescape Torment was one of the best games I have ever played. And it was my introduction to the D&D based Biowares games. I'm a philosopher myself and that makes this game very appealing to me, especially because I recognise a lot of the pholosophies because I thought of the same thing. I bet I'm not the only one ;-)
@@esneydergomez2288 Needed translator to respond, but while Disco Elysium didn't move me so much, Torment: Tides of numenera did. Maybe because the abstract of the world. Cheers
the whole planescape setting, the whole cosmology, all of it, incl the unlimited high spire, the unending abyss, the infernal pits of the nine hells, the torment tattoo, and especially this song... all of that makes me feeling so small... makes life so senseless... it makes me want to be not here... i want be there...
The first time i heard this i was like "a this song is cool" ... a few years and 3 playthroughs later, i now get tear in my eyes when i hear this. The memories i have of this game, the characters, the world, the plot and plight of the main character. Those memories i will never forget for this game changed the nature of this man
life and death, things that we don't really confront on behalf of the wisdom and fear inside them, yet they all come to my mind when the sound waving in my ear.
oh totally agree with you. one day this will be considered art , believe me. we just have to keep it alive!this game is exceptionally well written and its also incredibly philosophical.
PS:T story is unbelievable, deep, touching and incredibly well told. I have played many good RPG's and JRPG's, none of them got even close to Planescape. I even dare to say that this game's story matches the best book's out there. (I have read many of those that are considered the best) "What can chance a nature of a man..."
This breaks me down and builds me up again. A song of this emotional magnitude coupled with an overwhelming amount of nostalgia... it gets to me every single time.
I don't know what the dialogue with Deionnara looked like in the English version, but the Polish translation and dubbing used an extremely literary language full of symbolism. It was one of the best written and literary dialogues I have ever experienced in an RPG game.
You may listen to the sample in this video: th-cam.com/video/oDr5zEZ8Ml4/w-d-xo.html Her voice acting in polish version was also excelent - quite a feat given the fact that in english version she is dubbed by Jenifer Hale.
What I truly love about Planescape is the depth of the game, the dialogue and focus on story. I just love how much you gain from being intelligent, wise and charismatic. You can play the game over and over and always find new stuff and develop the nameless one in a different way. I can't play Planescape anymore without maxing out charisma, wisdom and intelligence anymore because of the loss of story line and secret options you incur.
This is still by far the best storyline of any game i've ever played. The nostalgia i get listening to this. The first time when you wake up and talk to Deionarra, and not knowing what is going on. Then coming back when you know whats going on and seeing her. You feel sorry for her, and the nameless one, even though they are just a piece of code :( . Best story ever written imo
My favorite game and story of all time. In the beginning the was "jefferson airplane", who went on to become "jefferson starship", who later became "starship", which had "Mark morgan" as a member, and he went on to do this awesome soundtrack for this game.
I finished Planescape: Torment 2 days ago and I still feel sad that it ended, it's the best game that was ever created! It's a damn shame that Planescape didn't get a sequel.
For all those craving more Planescape Torment awesomeness, there is a game called Planescape Tides of Numenera, which is the "spiritual successor" to Planescape Torment. It is similar to Torment and references a certain character from Torment. I'd highly recommend the game to any Planescape Torment fan.
The writers at Black Isle man, it was a perfect combination + the setting, Planescape and Forgotten Realms, led to these great games, and it also used the 2nd edition D&D rule set which was and is one of the best and most complex.
Just finished it with the EE version for the first time. There never has been a story like that in a game before, truly unique. I only can give my praise. I'm also glad that Obsidian now develops these kind of games, Tyranny was great as well while PoE is more your typical fantasy game. I just hope we will see more unique settings like this again.
Divinity Original Sin is a great harkon back to these golden days. Give it a go man, its on sale on steam right now too! (i realise this is an old-ish comment, but hey)
Ficker2 I'm all for opinions, but you are factually wrong there quite substantially. Have you even played through it or watched someone play it? I'm not saying it's the same as torment exactly, obviously.
I remember the first time encountering Deionarra in the halls; if you wander close enough to her, it triggers this music to play and I would just stop to listen and watch her lonely figure left suspended and waiting, as if time itself had abandoned her. I knew then that I was to become a part of a story that was both hauntingly beautiful and tragically sad.
True.
Updated my journal
THIS IS IT.
I feel stronger!
Dum
Forced it
Im Gone
Fuck the Practical incarnation with a rusty screwdriver.
That memory from the Sensory stone made me cry for real.
Honestly, what other choice did he have? Using deionarra was the most expedient way to ensure that he would get help at the fortress of regrets. TNO probably would have been completely fucked if she did not rescue her fro the trap. If your gonna hate on him, at least consider his options, if he had any in the first place.
Ruthless in every Machiavellian sense of the word
@@paytonholmes6019 ask his religion-slave
@@paytonholmes6019 He was only being Practical.
@@paytonholmes6019 Yes, it's just one of the many, countless lives sacrificed so he could gain back what he once chose to forfeit.
I finished this game yesterday, finally had the English skills required to understand this masterpiece. Even after so many years is still worth it.
That's awesome bro I congratulate you I know many English native speakers that the game would be too much for!
"Even after so many years is still worth it." - why wouldn't it be?
they dont have public schools in spain?
@@martineliasson2192how many foreign languages do you speak ? ;)
Reading is an excellent way to boost your language skills! This was a fun book to read with some clicking inbetween!
touching Deionarra's sensory stone was one of my favorite moments in my gaming history. If only other games had half the amount of depth and drama of just that one moment! Love it!
I Shall Wait for You in Death's Halls, My Love...
One of the best games I played on the computer growing up. Ironically the game was given to me by my brother's dad as a birthday present. He got it at a swap meet and apologized to me because he couldn't buy me something more expensive. Little did he know 11 years later, I still have and love this game. I consider myself lucky to have been able to play such an amazing game like this. Too bad not many others know of it's beautiful storyline =(
"You! What is it that brings you here?! Have you come to see first-hand the misery you have wrought? Perhaps in death I still hold some shred of use for you...?" Her voice drops into a hiss. "...'my love.'"
Awesome, the price doesn't always matter, more the gesture and the quality! This is one of my favourite ever stories.
I know this is 13 years later but you owe your...uhhh...step dad? Lol, a debt. One of the greatest games i ever played growing up in the 90s - 00s.
We both commented the same line after all...that fucking echo as she says it...
Having played it in 2022, at the age of 20
... I can never forget the experience.
I broke my leg in the summer of 2002 and spent my time playing this masterpiece.
"If there is anything I have learned in my travels across the Planes, it is that many things may change the nature of a man. Whether regret, or love, or revenge or fear - whatever you believe can change the nature of a man, can. I’ve seen belief move cities, make men stave off death, and turn an evil hag's heart half-circle. This entire Fortress has been constructed from belief. Belief damned a woman, whose heart clung to the hope that another loved her when he did not."
And it has made a posturing spirit think it is something more than a part of me
This is by far the most beautiful story in computer gaming. It feels like reading a book, but not just any book bu rather an amazing book at the level of The Lord of the Rings.
Hear hear.
Stumbling into Planescape's world has to be one of the most interesting things I've done in a long, long time. No way I'll ever forget it.
Did you forget?
This is not on the list of the best games I've ever played. Because this was not just a computer game. Those who never experienced will never understand.
+surobakianinpo yes, from this "journey", we learn a new interpretation regarding love, friendship, loyalty, duty and most important , redemption and forgiveness
Indeed
+SubBlaze1 what can change the nature of a man?
+Michal Bukvai I would say "Love" ..... It is not limited to the Love of a lady, but in fact it is the love of Life, the original Immortal love the life that he lives so he wants to remain on the plane, and for that he regret the wrongs that he did.. The Nameless one who i play simply cherish the friends, allies and people who he met in his life, he loves them all and the experience of travelling with them , he also loves the encounter with Deionarra, and hence he did all he can to "change" his former nature of Evil into a Good person...I remember he even comment after one of the quest to help the old man and his wife from the Dustman "As long as i am here, i will change the rule of nature, the perception that no one will simply help someone without asking for rewards"
@@michalbukvai7548 Acquiring new qualias, I guess.
Having five wits is good, but the day when progress will find a way to equip people with more of those, will be truly a great day. Because, the more wider and complicated our perception will get, the less human-like our mental processes will be.
"What can change the nature of a man?"
That question has shaped my way of thinking and perspective, even 20 years later. Such a profound impact.
Fate/Stay Night Fanatic
Same here.
War.
@@OiOlli83 War never changes.
funny, because the one that really wanted to hear the answer probably had "love" in their mind
''I shall wait for you in death's halls my love.''
That fucking echo effect...one of the moments growing up that really hit me.
20 years later this song still gives me goosebumps. Every time.
One does not simply forget the first encounter with Deionarra, _Ever_ .
Such a tragic tale.
I will wait for you in deaths halls my love
Well i did actually.
@@Transgender-ProphetMohammed Same. I don't even remember what I told her.
Thanks for this theme from the best game ever. A game I have had to play again and again every couple years since its release, a game that never grows old or die, just like the Nameless.
Jérémy Ethève I play every couple years also and make different choices.... best game ever
10 years later, I still return to this masterpiece regularly. This piece of music literally 'never' fails to give me chills.
Whatever happened to you, wizard? Is Montaron still with you?
@@viktorskarlatov8227 I could tell you, but I'd have to kill you... Montaron died, it was a very bloody affair, we had lobsters in avocado sauce afterwards.
Just beat this game for the first time today. Fucking masterpiece, most games nowadays look like shredded shit compared to this one.
so true played trought half a year ago , so good.
Death by kittens I play every couple years.... I still can't find a better story in today's games
I have also beaten it just today. The writing is simply astonishing, nothing in video games industry nowadays come close.
I want to hug the hat kid!
I am glad you played it and experienced it. Even now 7 years later, this game still reigns supreme in storytelling.
"YOU!!! What is it that brings _you_ here?! Have you come to see firsthand the misery you've wrought? Perhaps, even in death, I still hold some shred of use for you... my LOVE."
Wonderful, deep, and mysterious music.
True art doesnt speaks. True art lets your own echo play music of your soul. And thats Planescape Torment.
With the very first note, a massive flood of grievance and regret washed through my whole body. Unbelievable. A mere game, which I have played so many years ago that I have no idea of what its plot was, is still staying in the deep corner of my heart waiting to be provoked again. I can't help but set out for Sigil once more.
The first and the last game to make me cry so many years ago, I was in love back then ... what a pearl this game was and probably still is.
+Aurio DK You can actually buy it on GOG.
+matteo mm it comes with a .pdf e-book when you buy it from GoG.com though I didn't read it yet, it looks pretty good.
Well, I've heard the novel is just not up to par with the writing in the actual game and a lot of it runs contrary to what happens in game as well. Personally, I'd rather not spoil what I know since Chris Avellone had nothing to do with the novelization.
Probably?
First time ever playing this game today, and holy shit, this music made me tear up XD
Water story, Mark.
To this day I put that track on for Deionarra's theme. Still never fails to give me goosebumps...
This track, along with the following dialogue between the Nameless One and Dionarra (the first time you meet her, I mean) has to be one of the most emotional experiences I've ever felt in a video game to this date. It almost brought me to tears for real.
This is one of the reasons some games don't get old.
They just get forgotten.
I assure you, nobody that dwelved into this game till the end will ever forget it.
It's the first time I notice that on the left end of the logo there is a crying and screaming woman's head.
Seeing it and hearing the theme at the same time feels sad.
What the hell, never noticed that before.
This is the single best setting ever created for any story. Period.
this song should have been the main theme...it describes the whole feeling of the game, the torment of the planes forever changed by a man who was so afraid of death he managed to cheat it,the regret of his deeds and the pain he brought on others...this piece is a pure art
Poor poor girl... I remember the horror when I realized it was *I* who betrayed her and condemned her to that existence... It still saddens me to no end.
Finger Pirštas
Mark Morgan is a music composer who composed music for such games as Planescape: Torment, Fallout, Wasteland 2, and more ... :)
Practical Incarnation, like Tywin Lannister, was a master chessmaster, manipulating everything and everybody to suit his own goal, to get into Fortress of Regrets and end his immortality. He's lawful neutral due to his complete lack of morality - everything he did, he did to get the job done. The ultimate utilitarian. Screwing over Deionarra was definetely one of his most callous actions, but nearly everything is possible in the game thanks to the careful groundwork laid down by Practical Incarnation. Would be easier, if next ones didn't spoil some of his work.
The best book, what I ever play.
it was on my dads funeral. beautiful song, from the best game on the world!
INSTANT GOOSEBUMPS
Cue manly tears
Probably the best game i have ever played and before anyone ask is not nostaliga or anything i played it around 8 months ago. Still wish it was steam , but at least i got the cd home.
Gog.com
+TheDarkCreed86 ah thats right thx. I could ofc but it on gog thx m8.
damn this game is good . one of if not the best narrative ever. so underrated. thx for tip
I reply it every couple of years. It is by far the best game I have ever played. It is hard to describe in words how much I love it.
its on steam AND its enhanced :)
Words cannot describe my love for this game, it's a shame that it didn't get a sequel.
You are correct about Morte. He's voiced by Rob Paulsen who voiced Yakko, as well as Pinky from Pinky and the Brain. The dude has an enormous repertoire!
Best game ever. I played it so many times just to read the dialogs and understand the story line. Best scenario ever. You try to die in this game! So original. Thank you for uploading this song brings back memories. :)
Don't let it end like this...
I remember the first time i played Planescape. When i came to Deionarra you could say that the weigth of how important music is finally came down on me.
For the first time and the only time i felt totally immmersed into a virtual reality that had such a story to tell.
I could almost immediately sense the important relationship the two shared.
That scene alone is worth playing the entire game to see it come to fruition in the end.
LOL, I always thought Deionarra's voice sounded so much like Jennifer Hale and recently I found out because she voiced her.
The things Internet can search up for you:D
It's great to see this game becoming popular again. It's hard to describe how unique it felt back in 1999. Great game
Just started a new playthrough and forgot just how soothing (and moving) this is. Outstanding.
Cóż może zmienić naturę człowieka...
Bajo jajo
7 lat rządów PIS
Stupid Chris Avellone just had to go ahead and make stupid Planescape: Torment.
Now everything I play (shit, everything I *experience*) has to compare to this.
Επιτέλους ένας Έλληνας με γούστο! Updated my journal
Κωνσταντίνος Χαραλαμπόπουλος That bastard also made NWN2:MotB! Probably the only game I can compare to this game (even though the depths are less, it's more of a game for me)!
@cam3lopard isn't ME2 the fan fave, only played the original though
Try Disco Elysium.
@@aVataR_ehyeh Second This
Torment is the best game ever created and thier will never be one like Torment!!!!!!
"Endure. In enduring, grow strong."
For me, there is no better story than Planescape: Torment
Three Dog agreed.... no games these days have such a good story
The only competitors I can think of are The Last of Us and Red Dead Redemption 1 & 2 (especially 2). Nier: Automata also has brilliant storytelling, albeit slightly confusing
naah, those can't come even close
@@breeeegs there are many games with a better storyline than these
Mass Effect trilogy? Not counting the ending, I mean. Not as thought-provoking, but I find it very engaging.
This piece cuts into the brain and won't let go. Something you want, something you will never get.
when morte tells a story of 5 deaths, deionarra's death was the saddest one of them all. they were death of courage for morte, death of belief for dak'kon, death of memory for the nameless one, death of the body for an archer (one of previous companions). deionarra's death was death of grief. man, can such love exist?
Archer was Xachariah
Wouldn't it be the death of love? The death of grief would mean that they are happy, not sad
@@Rigby350 she loved the nameless one so much she let herself be manupilated by him. And he definitely did not love her. He needed her and discarded her önce he was done with her.
@@ramazantekin4144 wow bro 10 years later! Your whole life has changed
@@Rigby350 tell me about it bro.
Updated my journal.
I'm gone.
Only second time. Dude, I have replayed it at least several and have started playing again. And even though I know it is a magical game and hold it in such a high regard, each time I am surprised by its beauty.
aww man, the memories!
Amazing story.
Amazing music.
It's an absolute masterpiece of a video game.
it's wild that without context see a tattoo of some kind of snake monster reaching upward. then after playing the game all you can see is a crying woman.
🤯🤯 haven't beaten the game yet but damn I know this is gonna hit hard sometime
I played this game when it first came out, I dunno 10-15 years ago. I actually look back on it quite fondly, because the story and the music connect with me. I look at my life a lot and say, what CAN change the nature of a man? I can only half answer that question for myself. The game really hit home for me, so I'd say it's my favorite game of all time.
It has been 6 months since I played and completed this game for the first time and I still think about it daily
i am playing through this game for the first time now, and its so fantastic i cant describe it.
when you suddenly realise that you have to make thruthful answers based on yourself the player, not the namelessone. as more and more complex story unfolds.
5/5 easily. to bad nothing like this is ever going to be made in computer game history
I shall wait for you in death’s halls my love…”
I’ll probably remember that for the rest of my life. It still sends chills down my spine.
I am just listening to this song and some strange substance keeps flowing from my eyes. Why?
i am not worthy enough.
best RPG ever made.
As a game, plasnescape torment wasnt very good. Despite that, thanks to the absolute best writing i have seen on a screen of any kind, it is one of the absolute best games i have played these past 20+ years.
@MegaProudAlbanian It wasn't a game... it was a bronze sphere, light as air, with a faint odor of spoiled custard.
Listening to this song, I want to cry. Its just that I'm to happy to cry.
Planescape Torment was one of the best games I have ever played. And it was my introduction to the D&D based Biowares games.
I'm a philosopher myself and that makes this game very appealing to me, especially because I recognise a lot of the pholosophies because I thought of the same thing. I bet I'm not the only one ;-)
I 've played torment so many times, so many yerars. But i just know realize how moving this piece is...magnificent.
Creo que solamente Disco elysium a llegado al nivel.
@@esneydergomez2288 Needed translator to respond, but while Disco Elysium didn't move me so much, Torment: Tides of numenera did. Maybe because the abstract of the world. Cheers
Okay first off THANK YOU for posting these songs! And yes this game is amazing in so many ways. Just...amazing. No other way to say it.
best game, when i finished it i m feeleeing empty till now... :( and on and on :(
the whole planescape setting, the whole cosmology, all of it, incl the unlimited high spire, the unending abyss, the infernal pits of the nine hells, the torment tattoo, and especially this song... all of that makes me feeling so small... makes life so senseless... it makes me want to be not here... i want be there...
is it bad that I teared up at the first 5 seconds?
Same here bro. Hug?
+Viktor Skarlatov eh whats up chief
In knowing the teachings of Zerthimon, I have become stronger.
God damn I miss that game. I can never play it for the first time anymore. :(
There cannot be two skies!
Yeah I struggle with this as well...
The game is still just as incredible now as it was on release. There will never be another studio like Black Isle, never.
The first time i heard this i was like "a this song is cool" ... a few years and 3 playthroughs later, i now get tear in my eyes when i hear this. The memories i have of this game, the characters, the world, the plot and plight of the main character. Those memories i will never forget for this game changed the nature of this man
life and death, things that we don't really confront on behalf of the wisdom and fear inside them, yet they all come to my mind when the sound waving in my ear.
oh totally agree with you. one day this will be considered art , believe me. we just have to keep it alive!this game is exceptionally well written and its also incredibly philosophical.
So sweet and sad at the same time. Love this song!
PS:T story is unbelievable, deep, touching and incredibly well told.
I have played many good RPG's and JRPG's, none of them got even close to Planescape.
I even dare to say that this game's story matches the best book's out there. (I have read many of those that are considered the best)
"What can chance a nature of a man..."
Time is not your enemy, forever is. Imagine trapped in the hall forever because you loved someone so much and I am so glad that I ended her torment.
This song touches my heart, it brings a feeling of despair and sadness about things that one *knows* that will never change
This breaks me down and builds me up again. A song of this emotional magnitude coupled with an overwhelming amount of nostalgia... it gets to me every single time.
Planescape and Baldur's Gate had a charm that will never again be encountered in any other games.
I don't know what the dialogue with Deionnara looked like in the English version, but the Polish translation and dubbing used an extremely literary language full of symbolism. It was one of the best written and literary dialogues I have ever experienced in an RPG game.
You may listen to the sample in this video: th-cam.com/video/oDr5zEZ8Ml4/w-d-xo.html
Her voice acting in polish version was also excelent - quite a feat given the fact that in english version she is dubbed by Jenifer Hale.
@@Godunow100 It sounds very nice, but unfortunately I cannot distinguish literary English from colloquial English.
@@marcinjaraszek1786 its very far from colloquial :) polish version of her dialogue is quite faithful in style to the original.
Just played PS:T for this first time. This is easily my favourite song from the game, I wish it were longer.
What I truly love about Planescape is the depth of the game, the dialogue and focus on story. I just love how much you gain from being intelligent, wise and charismatic. You can play the game over and over and always find new stuff and develop the nameless one in a different way. I can't play Planescape anymore without maxing out charisma, wisdom and intelligence anymore because of the loss of story line and secret options you incur.
my god...this brings out memories...almost started to cry
Best story ever told. As simple as that.
This is still by far the best storyline of any game i've ever played. The nostalgia i get listening to this. The first time when you wake up and talk to Deionarra, and not knowing what is going on. Then coming back when you know whats going on and seeing her. You feel sorry for her, and the nameless one, even though they are just a piece of code :( . Best story ever written imo
"What can change the nature of a man?"
at the end it looked like he was okay with it and had finally accepted his fate
This brings back some memories. Depressing, yet beautiful and touching. Perfect.
what can change the nature of a man?
hell of a game, one of the best
My favorite game and story of all time.
In the beginning the was "jefferson airplane", who went on to become "jefferson starship", who later became "starship", which had "Mark morgan" as a member, and he went on to do this awesome soundtrack for this game.
I finished Planescape: Torment 2 days ago and I still feel sad that it ended, it's the best game that was ever created! It's a damn shame that Planescape didn't get a sequel.
There is some kind of Sequel, "Torment: Tides of Numenera" it is a spiritual successor. And still, i like to replive Planescape once in a while.
@@FaethorFerenzcy Yeah, but I wish there was a direct sequel to Planescape: Torment. Btw, is Tides of Numenera good?
@@emperorpalpatine6239 Well it is well written, but honestly i had adaption problems to some mechanics. So i more or less rushed trough.
I really envy you that you have finished it for the first time just recentlly ;-)
I'll love this song till I die. RIP Deionarra 💙❤
For all those craving more Planescape Torment awesomeness, there is a game called Planescape Tides of Numenera, which is the "spiritual successor" to Planescape Torment. It is similar to Torment and references a certain character from Torment. I'd highly recommend the game to any Planescape Torment fan.
eeeh I thought it was alright, but I doubt if it can even hold a candle to a game like planescape
The writers at Black Isle man, it was a perfect combination + the setting, Planescape and Forgotten Realms, led to these great games, and it also used the 2nd edition D&D rule set which was and is one of the best and most complex.
Cheers bgreman, fancied listening to some Planescape Torment. Really is a great RPG.
"...Once, it made a man seek immortality and achieve it. And it has made a posturing spirit think it is something more than a part of me."
Just finished it with the EE version for the first time. There never has been a story like that in a game before, truly unique. I only can give my praise. I'm also glad that Obsidian now develops these kind of games, Tyranny was great as well while PoE is more your typical fantasy game. I just hope we will see more unique settings like this again.
sigh....they dont make games like this anymore. Shame..
Look up Pillars of Eternity and Tides of Numenera.
Divinity Original Sin is a great harkon back to these golden days. Give it a go man, its on sale on steam right now too!
(i realise this is an old-ish comment, but hey)
MusabreGames Divinity is a generic RPG that has no story to speak of. It's nothing like Torment.
Ficker2
I'm all for opinions, but you are factually wrong there quite substantially. Have you even played through it or watched someone play it?
I'm not saying it's the same as torment exactly, obviously.
*****
So you honestly think it "has no story to speak of."... really?
Are you disingenuous or what.
This tune made me so nostalgic. I reinstalled PST and im gonna play it for a second time!
best game ever made, best story ever told.
shiver goes down my spine when i remember those words: What can change the nature of a man?
Absolutelly genius theme, one of a kind motif.