There are various places you can get these, but I recommend this set that I generated: Soundtrack Filesįor any of the solutions in this guide, you first have to get a set of music files that make up the Quake soundtrack: one file for every music track on the original CD. And there are plenty of other reasons you might not want to mess with a physical CD anyway.įortunately there are several ways to manage without a physical CD and still hear the good old creepy Quake music while you play. Or you might not be – the original Quake engines, and some (or all?) modern Quake engines, will not properly loop the music tracks when used in versions of Windows after Windows XP. Of course, if you have an original Quake CD from back in the day, and it's still readable, then you might be good to go. The problem with that now is that if you get Quake through digital distribution, you don't get a CD. The soundtrack music was never installed to your hard drive as a file. Each track was actually a track on the CD itself (starting with track 2 track 1 contained the game data). Table of ContentsĪs originally released, Quake played its soundtrack music using CD audio. Or, you can send me an email at my address at the bottom of this page. This guide is also hosted at the Steam community site: Quake Soundtrack Solutions If you have comments, questions, corrections, or additions, please post a comment on the guide over there. The Quake soundtrack makes singleplayer better! Here's the collected wisdom of how to deal with the fact that Steam doesn't mail you a physical Quake CD.
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