Thisis a list of music tracks originating from non-character universes and universes with only one game in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. All tracks listed here are available to play on Summit, Hanenbow, Balloon Fight, Living Room, Find Mii, Tomodachi Life, PictoChat 2, Duck Hunt, Wrecking Crew, Pilotwings, and Wuhu Island, all of which are stages from universes that either have no playable characters or only have a single game. As of the 8.1.0 update, these tracks are also available to play on Battlefield, Small Battlefield, Big Battlefield, and Final Destination.
This track is a fast-paced rock medley of several songs and jingles heard in Duck Hunt. The medley includes the title theme, Duck Hunt intro jingle, "duck hit" jingle, perfect jingle, score count sound effect, miss jingle, Clay Shooting intro theme, and game over jingle.
A medley of various themes from Balloon Fight, taking a jazzy approach with chiptune elements. The main melody consists of the opening jingle that plays when beginning a new game and the tune that plays when popping an enemy's balloons. The ambient beeps that play during the main game can be heard in the background at several parts of the song. The song also includes brief parts of the "Balloon Trip" theme, the jingle that plays when the fish snatches somebody, the respawning jingle, the stage clear jingle, and the game over jingle, as well as the sound effects that play when popping a bubble and falling off-screen. The medley ends with the jingle that plays when finishing a perfect round of the bonus game, then loops back to the beginning.
This track is a light arrangement of the music that would play in Balloon Fight during the Balloon Trip side-game. In Balloon Fight, this music piece also played during a Bonus Round. This remix integrates the sounds of balloon inflation, while consisting of synths and a drumset. This remix returns from Super Smash Bros. Brawl after not being included in Super Smash Bros. 4.
A remix of the Balloon Trip theme from Balloon Fight; although similarly named to the remix from Brawl, this is a new arrangement with a more chiptune-esque sound, rearranged by the original composer, Hirokazu Tanaka.
This remix, returning from Super Smash Bros. Brawl, is a medley of music pieces from the NES game Clu Clu Land. The song includes the Level Start theme, the main level theme, the "hurry up" theme, the stage clear theme, and the bonus round theme. The track overall takes a jazzy approach with segments incorporating synths and electric guitars, and also includes instruments and sound effects from the original game.
This track is a remixed medley of music pieces from Ice Climber. The arrangement begins with a short monologue: "Hey, guys! It's Ice Climber. Well, I'll show you how to move. Get rhythm with your friends, and rock the iceberg!" The track moves to a piano-based remix of the Bonus Stage Theme, transitions to a fast-paced electric guitar remix of the same theme, then slows down to a relaxed remix of the Stage Theme before looping back to the start. The music is designed to sync up with the motions of the Summit stage; however, later loops will desynchronize the track, as will altering the gameplay speed and pausing the game.
A medley of the "Game Start", "BGM A", "Bonus Round", and "Power-Up" themes from Wrecking Crew. Compared to the Ultimate medley, this track starts with a similar jazz style, but incorporates more electronic elements, including synth leads and a wobble bass.
When a character acquires the Golden Hammer item, this track will play as the character flails the weapon, but the track when the Golden Hammer is active is slightly different because of the bass line octave-pitched up.
This track is a synthesized, bass-focused medley of songs from the NES game Mach Rider. The track begins with the Title Screen before transitioning to the Course theme that played during actual gameplay. The next two sub-tracks are the Course Select theme, followed by the jingle that played when a course is selected. The medley finishes off with the Game Over jingle before looping back to the Title Screen. This remix debuted in Melee.
A medley of several themes from The Mysterious Murasame Castle, Takamaru's game of origin. It starts with "Game Start" and proceeds to the "Castle Town" (called "Douchuumen - The Mysterious Murasame Castle" in this game). It then transitions to the "Mysterious Castle" theme, followed by the "Bonus Stage" theme, the "Inside the Castle" music, and finally the "Game Over" jingle before looping. The overall song has an upbeat style that combines acoustic instruments with a prominent bass and drumkit.
This track is a direct chiptune port of the main theme from The Mysterious Murasame Castle. The original track was heavily based off of Japanese folk music, and is renowned for using the Famicom Disk System's limited audio hardware to a high standard.
This track is a medley of various songs from Famicom Mukashibanashi Shin Onigashima, known more commonly as Shin Onigashima; the game's soundtrack is based heavily on Japanese folk music. The music within the medley includes the game's title screen theme, the "At Home" theme played in Chapter 1, and the "Neighboring Village" theme played in Chapter 4. The arrangement style is based on speed-metal music with a much higher tempo than the original songs. It focuses primarily on guitars, drums, and bass, while a piano accompaniment is introduced during the "Neighboring Village" segment.
Nikolay Nekrasov was a Russian poet who wrote a poem called "Korobeiniki" in the nineteenth century. The poem gained popularity and was turned into a Russian folk song with many orchestral arrangements. The song was later arranged in the Game Boy game Tetris, where it was offered as one of the three available music tracks. Tetris named this track Type A. The Tetris arrangement had some changes from the original folk song, however. This arrangement of "Korobeiniki" is an orchestral piece more similar to the original folk song than the Tetris arrangement.
This track is a Russian folk-style remix of the second music track that can be played in the Game Boy game Tetris during gameplay, where it was called Type B. It features a balalaika, a style of Russian acoustic guitar, as well as vocal chanting and portions taken from the original Game Boy song.
This track is a medley of themes from Yūyūki, a 1989 adventure game for the Famicom, and the spiritual successor to Shin Onigashima. The remix, while featuring an electric guitar and synthetic accompaniment, is primarily led by an erhu, a traditional Chinese string instrument. In order, the song contains "Opening Title", "Name Entry", "Battle Theme", "Meteor Shower", "GO WEST!", "Dancing People", the second part of "Main BGM", "Demo BGM", "Women Village", "Parting Ways", and "Bull Demon King Clear".
This track is a new jazzy arrangement of the music that plays when the player partakes in the Light Plane event in Pilotwings, primarily featuring saxophone and brass sections backed by synths.
A jazz fusion-style remix of the music that plays when the player partakes in the Light Plane event in Pilotwings. It features rhodes, synths, and clean electric guitars with a saxophone as its lead instrument; there are also faint vocals in the background.
A remix of the music that plays in the game Pilotwings Resort, with a light jazz style that includes piano, brass, and clean electric guitar. It starts with "Opening", then changes to the main song "Turbo Jet". Before looping, a small remix of "Light Plane" from the original Pilotwings can be heard. This song was rearranged by its original composer, Asuka Ito.
A remix of the music that plays when the player partakes in the Hang Glider event in Pilotwings Resort. The song's overall style is gentle with light percussion and a focus on guitars. It should be noted that this remix actually is more similar to the Hang Glider theme rather than the Pedal Glider theme. This song was rearranged by its original composer, Asuka Ito.
This track is a remix of a music piece in Game Boy game X. After finishing the tutorial at the beginning of X, the player is warped to a tunnel that takes the player to the main game. This track is the theme that is heard inside that tunnel with a techno-inspired spin. This remix debuted in Brawl and was originally a Lylat Cruise track.
This track is a synthpop and acoustic remix of Lip the Flower Fairy's theme music from Panel De Pon. Outside of Japan, the game was localized into Tetris Attack, and the track was used only in the tutorial. This remix debuted in Brawl.
This track originates from the Nintendo 64 game 1080 Snowboarding, where it played whenever a player was snowboarding in the Golden Forest and Deadly Fall levels. This track is a direct port of its original version.
This track takes a progressive rock approach to two music tracks from Golden Sun: The Lost Age, sequel to Golden Sun: the standard battle theme and the final boss theme. This song debuted in Brawl and was rearranged by its original composer, Motoi Sakuraba.
An original track from Golden Sun: Dark Dawn, which is the theme for whenever Matthew is on the Overworld Map. The name of the track refers to the flat world in which Golden Sun is based in.
This is the version of a track taken directly from Monster Hunter 4, which released internationally as Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate, where it plays during the ending sequence. It originally appeared in the original Monster Hunter.
This track is an original, piano-based piece based around sound effects from the original Nintendo DS menu, the Wii menu, and most prominently, PictoChat. Sound effects used within the track include the Nintendo DS's start-up jingle, entering and leaving PictoChat, loading the Wii Menu, and typing noises from both systems.
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