It is almost Halloween! Or, well, it was when we wrote this — but the Halloween spirit lives on all year long for some of us. Whether you're looking for a playlist to have on in the background of your Halloween party, or you just really love to live life on the edge of your seat by listening to creepy songs in the daytime, then we have the playlist for you!
We asked around the office to see what Nintendo Life staffers' personal picks are for music that gets them feeling nervous, and together we built a list that ranges from "designed to be scary" to the sort of songs that are only scary because of the context.
Including all your favourite tracks from Pokémon, Mario, Zelda, and more, this playlist is exactly what you need to set the mood... as long as that mood is "I need to change into my brown trousers". Good luck!
Sorrow (Resident Evil 4, 2005)
Composer(s): Misao Senbongi
Sitting down to write words for my nominations, I realised that my picks are more haunting and melancholic than downright think-I'm-gonna-have-a-trouser-accident scary. It does get full-on creepy about halfway through, but this one certainly starts off plaintive as you watch a rough hewn but extremely effective tableau of happier times for the villager folk before Las Plagas descended on them. Having witnessed and fought through the horrors that would come, it's a deeply affecting sequence and one that has stayed with me. GL
Resi 4 is extreeeeemely melancholic, but yeah... is there anything sadder/creepier than a slideshow of all the people you just stabbed in the face to get Ashley back? Was it worth it, Leon? Was it??? KG
Hear it in: Resident Evil 4
Luigi Humming at Low Health (Luigi's Mansion, 2001)
Composer(s): Kazumi Totaka; Shinobu Tanaka
You could argue that Luigi's Mansion isn't very spooky, but there was just something about the GameCube original that really put us in the oversized shoes of Luigi. His off-kilter humming just heightens the tension on this bassy, sparse tune; you can't help but feel on edge while you wait for the next horrible ghost to frighten your overalls off. KG
Hear it in: Luigi's Mansion
Death (Fez, 2012)
Composer(s): Disasterpeace
Fez is a nice, relaxing game about a lil guy exploring the world through platforming, right? WRONG. It is also about being scared out of your socks by cosmic horror and the yawning void of existential fear. Disasterpeace's track here is used for a particularly tricky late-game door puzzle, and by this point, you'll most likely be freaking out that the story goes much, much deeper than you realised. Cubes are just the beginning, man. KG
Hear it in: Fez
Forest Temple (Zelda: Ocarina of Time, 1998)
Composer(s): Koji Kondo
Again, 'spooky' isn't quite the right word to describe this incredible track. It's a kaleidoscope of sound that beautifully mirrors the surreal and subtle danger of the first 'proper' dungeon you encounter as an adult in the game. It's rattling and haunting, but also wondrous; Koji Kondo captures the majesty and terror of the Forest Temple and sets the tone for the epic quest ahead. GL
You might argue that the areas that are supposed to be scary — specifically, Under The Well and the Shadow Temple — have creepier music than the Forest Temple, but there's something extra-unnerving about an area that's supposed to be relatively tame having really spooky music. I mean, it's the first temple! Calm down, Koji! KG
Hear it in: The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D
Lavender Town (Pokémon Red and Blue, 1998)
Composer(s): Junichi Masuda
You thought we wouldn't have Lavender Town on here? Of course we do — it's the song so spooky that it spawned tons of playground rumours about people whose eyes fell out and whose souls were reaped by a vengeful Raticate ghost or whatever. It's horrible, but it does exactly what it means to: creep out a generation of unsuspecting kids. Boop-boop-beep-boop. However, I'm inclined to argue that this one is creepier precisely because of the playground rumours. There's nothing worse than music that has a bunch of urban legends tied to it. KG
Hear it in: Pokémon Red and Blue, Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, Pokémon Gold and Silver, Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver (although it's WAY less scary in this last version. Booo.)
Castle Theme (Super Mario World, 1990)
Composer(s): Koji Kondo
There's something about extremely lo-fi music that gives me the willies. Just like watching black-and-white TV meant having to use your imagination to fill in the colour, SNES games wormed their way into your head to create something far larger than the pixels on-screen and the relatively basic music that accompanied each level. Koji Kondo's Castle Theme is a great example: foreboding, bassy, and a fantastic match to the castle levels, which required you to leave poor Yoshi outside because it's just too dangerous for a little dinosaur. Those restrained, muted repetitive notes are an excellent use of the fairly limited musical tools that Kondo had to hand at the time. Bravo. KG
Hear it in: Super Mario World
Alien (Alien: Isolation, 2014)
Composer(s): Joe Henson and Alexis Smith
If you like being terrified and have a fondness for the original Alien movie, then Alien: Isolation is an absolute must-have (with a particularly good Switch port). You spend large parts of the game creeping around desperately avoiding the Alien, recreating the horror and fear that typified the film. Its music, like the broader sound design, is outstanding. What's particularly interesting with the soundtrack is that it is very dynamic, smartly adjusting to the randomised elements of a playthough (for example whether the Alien gets a jump on you). There's no fixed soundtrack as such, but fans have produced some excellent cuts for our listening pleasure. It's all incredibly atmospheric, but a track simply called 'Alien' seemed like a sensible choice! TW
Hear it in: Alien: Isolation
Ikana Valley (The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask, 2000)
Composer(s): Koji Kondo
It's hard to pick the spookiest song from the spookiest Zelda game of all time, but Ikana Valley is an easy choice once you realise that both the song and the place are deliberate combinations of all the scariest parts of Zelda. Just as the cursed Ikana Canyon piles it on thick with a graveyard, a well, Gibdos, Poes, ReDeads, and tons of skeletons, so too does the music: the droning is straight from Temple of Time, the unsettling ocarina foreshadows the Elegy of Emptiness, and there's even some Malon-like singing which recalls Romani Ranch, the warped mirror of Ocarina of Time's Lon Lon Ranch. What a song. I hate it. KG
I agree. I always avoid going to Ikana. Perfectly awful audio. GL
Hear it in: Majora's Mask, Majora's Mask 3D
Looping Steps (Super Mario 64, 1996)
Composer(s): Koji Kondo
The best part of this deeply unnerving track is that it uses science to creep you out. The endless staircase in Peach's Castle is meant to be a sort of trap, for if Mario has fewer than 70 Power Stars, the stairs will just go on forever. To match the endless looping of the stairs, the music itself is an endless loop, using something called the Shepard tone illusion. It sounds like it's always going up, even though it's actually just a bunch of notes played to make you think it's always going up — but knowing the science behind it doesn't make it any less spine-tingling. KG
Hear it in: Super Mario 64, Super Mario 64 DS, Super Mario 3D All-Stars
Darkness Rises (The Banner Saga 3, 2018)
Composer(s): Austin Wintory
This may seem like a punt, be bear with me. The Banner Saga Trilogy is a fascinating set of games that is consistently making you feel dread, putting you up against increasingly difficult odds as world-ending events unfold. It does this with an incredible soundtrack backing it up, strengthened by a live band performance. In the third game the sense of an ominous darkness reaches a peak, and this track reflects a moment where you descend even deeper. Not necessarily 'spooky' on its own, but in the context of this series' epic quest it's an ominous variation on the main musical theme. TW
Hear it in: The Banner Saga 3, Banner Saga Trilogy
Isle o' Hags (Banjo-Tooie, 2000)
Composer(s): Grant Kirkhope
Mad Monster Mansion is the obvious go-to for creepy Banjo-Kazooie music from maestro Grant Kirkhope, but in keeping with the off-kilter picks I've got going here, I've chosen the brilliant Isle o' Hags overworld theme from the sequel. By using the same 6/8 rhythm, Kirkhope echoed the feeling of Grunty's Lair while bringing a more melancholy er, I mean spooky tone to the darker second game. It's more Brothers Grimm than nursery rhyme, although it's still got bounce and I adore it. Rumours that I assembled many years ago a 25-minute super cut which includes all the different area variants are entirely spurious. It's 26 minutes, actually. GL
Hear it in: Banjo-Tooie
Dairon - Blackout (Metroid Dread, 2021)
Composer(s): Soshi Abe and Sayako Doi
Considering it's been such a hot release this year and has Dread in the title, we had to feature the latest Metroid game. It's an atmospheric experience, so you could certainly take your pick in terms of tracks. We've opted for a part relatively early in the game as you arrive in an area that has no power. Though you've gained a few powers you're still pretty vulnerable, so entering a space that is practically pitch black leads to plenty of tension. There's a consistent deep, otherworldly and rhythmic 'growl' throughout, with some classic sci-fi vibes mixed in. TW
Hear it in: Metroid Dread
Thirteen (Minecraft, 2011)
Composer(s): C418
In Minecraft, there are two different soundtracks: The songs that play as you explore, and the songs that you can only find as "discs" in the world. They're extremely rare, hard to find, and range from lovely songs like Cat and Pigstep to horrifyingly eerie ones like 13. You could potentially argue that the disc known only as "11" is the creepiest, but it's less of a song and more of a series of creepy noises, so 13 is the winner here, thanks to its use of bells, reverb, and binaural panning that makes you feel like you're actually in a cave, and something bad is about to happen. Thanks for the nightmares, C418! KG
Hear it in: Minecraft
One man's scary is another man's... not scary, of course, so do let us know your thoughts (and personal picks!) in the comments. And have a very happy/haunted Halloween, unless you're reading this when it's not Halloween, in which case... have a nice day!
Further reading:
Comments 36
On this list I think Ikana Valley is the creepiest song.
Glad to see Thirteen on this list. Great spooky tune
The music in OOT's Shadow Temple/The Well and even Dodongo's Cavern was so terrifying to me when I was little that I had to turn down the volume to play it. lol (and I didn't play through Shadow Temple until I was an adult lol)
What about Submerged Castle from Pikmin 2? One of the hardest dungeons in the game, in addition to the feeling that you're not alone...
Also, one of the Trial areas (forgot name) from Pokemon Sun/Moon is rather unsettling; listen with headphones and you'll know what I mean.
Bevelle's Secret FF X-2
Disquiet FF X-2
Lavender town still gives me chills. I would put the music down as a child because I heard it turned people crazy. It didn't help in the end...
Ayo, where tf is DK64 Frantic Factory?
Lavender Town is the reason I love cemetery areas in the Pokemon games! Such a shame that Pokemon Y and X do not have such area
Has to be LM Switch for me and the as for the man who advertised it, his voice was very creepy in a bad way!!
Nice article Kate, fits the season and everyone loves Halloween. Will be interesting to see if we could find enough Christmas songs
I always play the Luigis Mansion games during Halloween
The mirror room music from Amy's story in Sonic Adventure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6YQ6vlEE7NE
But also nothing quite like Gregorian chants before the orchestral music goes all out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Voz7AJnpBXo
And speaking of final boss themes that go hard:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1it2CiuIujM
The original Fire Temple music from OoT is very spooky. Had it as my Hyrule Field music in the last Rando I did which was… fun.
Not spooky song but still sounds very dark dance song.
Wraith by Monolithic from DDR UNIVERSE XBOX 360.
Ashley's theme in Wario Ware, with lyrics and all!
Oh, and the theme of the three crones in The Witcher 3. That theme, together with the design of the crones themselves, actually made me physically unwell.
And if you call it music, the music when the character in Eternal Darkness is losing their mind.
Fun list! When I lived in a trick or treating neighborhood, each year I’d pipe a mix of different spooky music from games and TV outside for all the trick-or-treaters.
It included stuff like the Munsters, Thriller, a lot of Mario haunted house music, Castlevania, some pinball BGM (Monster Bash and Elvira’s Scared Stiff) and especially Zombies Ate My Neighbors music, which I think is as distinctive a schlock horror sound as you can get. 👻🎃
Forest Temple is a great choice. A place that’s supposed to be scared and safe for the inhabitants of the forest is now abandoned, decrepit, haunted, and full of horrid monsters. The world has changed a lot since Link was a kid.
… the midnight hour is close at hand’ That’s all I came to say, had to acknowledge the tag line! 😊
I love the save room music in RE4. Actually the save room music in any given RE game is always fantastic.
No Castlevania tracks?! I think “Underground Waterway” from Castlevania 64 [https://youtu.be/B_Ijx6NVfWg] would’ve made a great choice. There are a ton of tracks from Castlevania 64 that would’ve slid nicely into this list.
(Despite that, this list is solid AF.)
No River Twygz Bed from Super Paper Mario? It's used all the time in spooky YouTube videos. World of Nothing from the same game also gets the mood across.
Maybe not spooky, but definitely dour and melancholy inspiring feelings of dread, loss and hopelessness.
This list is Zombies Ate My Neighbors erasure and I cannot stand for it in good conscience
FF7 deserves a couple of mentions here.
There's Trail Of Blood (when you are held captive in the Shinra building and awaken to the prison doors being open and a trail of blood to follow). Particularly atmospheric because the music continues in the random encounters instead of the battle music playing.
Also, can't remember the track name from the OST but the scene in the library of the old Shinra mansion when Sephiroth says something like "going to find mother" has some very creepy music. EDIT: The track is "Those Chosen By The Planet". It might be the track that also plays in the legendary Sephiroth fire scene too? My memory fails me...!
Not forgetting One Winged Angel of course!
The midnight hour is close at hand
Splatterhouse 2, Dracula, Decap Attack on Sega Genesis are perfect if you’re looking for more vintage themes! I blast Splatterhouse 2 every year
@ChromaticDracula the FDS CV soundtracks are essential!
While not spooky the Magician from The House of the Dead is the best when it comes to zombie boss themes.
Always got a chill out of the Invasion music from MM.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWFwACXa_Zg
....Super Mario 64's endless stairs theme?...really? lol
Lavender town is still terrifying
Some additional standouts for me:
“Those Chosen by the Planet” (Final Fantasy VII)
“Kuja’s Theme” (Final Fantasy IX)
“Bionis’ Awakening” (Xenoblade Chronicles)
“Child of the Elder Blood” (The Witcher III: Wild Hunt)
“Those Who Sow Darkness” (Fire Emblem: Three Houses”)
“Only the Corpse Goes Out” (Ys IX: Monstrum Nox)
The Forest Temple and Water Temple music is some of my fav game music ever. I also adore the soundtrack to Silent Hill 2, even though I've only ever played 5 minutes of the game (too scary). Along those lines I really like music from the beginning of that PS1 looking 60fps weird Switch game that has Tori gates and trippy visuals (I'll have to look it up)
Update: Fatum Betula! That's the game. I really like the strange sounds/music of the beginning area in the temple where the stairway leads up to the waterway.
Can't help but notice the distinct lack of Paper Mario representation on this list.
Super Paper Mario arm wrestles with itself for the spookiest/most disturbing track in the franchise...
River Twigz or World of nothing... which is the spookiest?
And the other entries all have something that qualifies as spooky...
Great choices. I'm surprised some of the list didn't stick with me more from childhood (like Forest Temple from Ocarina of Time).
Maybe that's because Ceremony from Secret of Mana is so terrifying. It's the stuff of nightmares! I'm surprised it hasn't been mentioned in the comments yet at least.
In the Dead of the Night is creepy too:
HOW IN THE H*CK IS THE RIVER TWYGZ BED FROM SUPER PAPER MARIO NOT ON HERE? THAT IS NIGHTMARE FUEL. World of Nothing from Super Paper Mario is also pretty scary. (If we're going really far/outside of the realm of nintendo-esque, the Binding of Isaac has some pretty scary stuff too)
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