not a big fan of it imma give it 2.5/10
NICE ANIMATION THO ill give em that
Gonna repeat: Not bad, but I think people should temper their expectations tbh. Die For You really set the standard as the first Valorant Champions song and it hit hard. Fire Again might not replicate the same hype Die For You did but goddamn it's still a banger.
I gave Die For You 9/10, Fire Again an 8/10
TMosura [#14]Gonna repeat: Not bad, but I think people should temper their expectations tbh. Die For You really set the standard as the first Valorant Champions song and it hit hard. Fire Again might not replicate the same hype Die For You did but goddamn it's still a banger.
I gave Die For You 9/10, Fire Again an 8/10
i was expecting chrissy costanza type of music like they did in League but hey im just dissapointed
TMosura [#14]Gonna repeat: Not bad, but I think people should temper their expectations tbh. Die For You really set the standard as the first Valorant Champions song and it hit hard. Fire Again might not replicate the same hype Die For You did but goddamn it's still a banger.
I gave Die For You 9/10, Fire Again an 8/10
I don't think Die for you set the standard tbh. Standards are set by LoL worlds music thats where people's expectations come from.
JiangLi [#18]I don't think Die for you set the standard tbh. Standards are set by LoL worlds music thats where people's expectations come from.
I'd argue is both. A bit layered, even. I'd wager half of the esports fanbase didn't expect Die For You when it got announced. There was only a random Twitter announcement and it was enough to send the hype into the stratosphere. With Riot's records of their Worlds songs and Die For You being the first Champions song ever when it came out, it delivered hard per expectations.
The problem in my opinion is that people always expect too much out of Riot. They're like any producers ever. Some are bangers, some are decent, and some are shit. Big deal. Fire Again had a relatively tall task of balancing people's expectations while keeping them fresh. Good job on them.
TMosura [#20]I'd argue is both. A bit layered, even. I'd wager half of the esports fanbase didn't expect Die For You when it got announced. There was only a random Twitter announcement and it was enough to send the hype into the stratosphere. With Riot's records of their Worlds songs and Die For You being the first Champions song ever when it came out, it delivered hard per expectations.
The problem in my opinion is that people always expect too much out of Riot. They're like any producers ever. Some are bangers, some are decent, and some are shit. Big deal. Fire Again had a relatively tall task of balancing people's expectations while keeping them fresh. Good job on them.
IF you are talking about the song yes Die for you set the standard there . But not visuals and storyline . They are miles better in LoL . But I think from next year with franchised teams the visuals will also be on the level of League.
JiangLi [#21]IF you are talking about the song yes Die for you set the standard there . But not visuals and storyline . They are miles better in LoL . But I think from next year with franchised teams the visuals will also be on the level of League.
Miles better in LoL? Sure? It's Champion's second year and the fact that Riot were able to make this on a standard similar to what we expect from Worlds songs is amazing.
Not in visuals and storyline? It didn't need to be. Look at Warriors back in 2014. That was simply a hype music video with an underlying storyline. Die For You perfectly mirrored both whatever lore Valorant has at that time and the message it perceived for each of the three characters that were there.
nutab1e [#19]I think it was a great song. As good as die for you. I didn't realize people liked die for you so much? Tbh neither are insane both good songs.
hard agree