Destiny 2: Lightfall launches next week, and Bungie dropped the typically epic cinematic trailer for the new expansion, but setting it to a weirdly brooding cover version of Radiohead’s Karma Police was definitely the choice. …
Coming February 28th, Destiny 2’s latest expansion adds new powers, weapons, enemies, locations, and all the cool stuff. Bungie has made another great trailer that delivers the hype for tackling the biggest threat ever in The Witness, but with Traveler’s Light already making a dark and edgy cover of the trailer’s song for his Beat it with version. ?
Destiny 2: Lightfall Launch Trailer
For some reason, this isn’t the first time Radiohead’s Karma Police has been drafted as a selection for an action game trailer. Ghost Recon Breakpoint Announcement Trailer Much like Bungie did with Paint It Black in the Beyond Light trailer, we’ve spun it into a swooping orchestral theme that’s only occasionally recognizable. That said, the trend of using ill-fitting truck overturned covers apparently goes back a long way. Xbox Game Studios’ own Gears of War was created as one of his most notable examples. The original launch trailer cut footage of capricious mutants and men dressed as bottles to a pared-down version of Gary Jules’ Mad World from Tears for Fears, and the series later re-covered in the Ultimate Edition trailer. and took the cover even further by featuring instrumentals from Gears of War 3.
Destiny Had Its Own Killer OST — Misha Mansoor’s Awesome Sepiks Redux arrangement was a highlight among Rise of Iron’s many choice cuts — and while it does make a bit of sense to use a licensed track for a goofy live-action trailer (Sabotage and Immigrant Song work well in those contexts. did), an intense and almighty witness to dangerous covers of old Radiohead songs. Gravity really doesn’t exist as much as you think. stop it.
what happened to the trailer? Do you want to return to Destiny 2 when Lightfall releases next week, or are you waiting for Bungie to release Crucible footage cut to William Shatner’s cover of Common People first, Guardian’s Everyone, please tell me!