game-audio
Game audio principles. Sound design, music integration, adaptive audio systems.
Best use case
game-audio is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Game audio principles. Sound design, music integration, adaptive audio systems.
Teams using game-audio should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/game-audio/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How game-audio Compares
| Feature / Agent | game-audio | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Game audio principles. Sound design, music integration, adaptive audio systems.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Game Audio Principles > Sound design and music integration for immersive game experiences. --- ## 1. Audio Category System ### Category Definitions | Category | Behavior | Examples | |----------|----------|----------| | **Music** | Looping, crossfade, ducking | BGM, combat music | | **SFX** | One-shot, 3D positioned | Footsteps, impacts | | **Ambient** | Looping, background layer | Wind, crowd, forest | | **UI** | Immediate, non-3D | Button clicks, notifications | | **Voice** | Priority, ducking trigger | Dialogue, announcer | ### Priority Hierarchy ``` When sounds compete for channels: 1. Voice (highest - always audible) 2. Player SFX (feedback critical) 3. Enemy SFX (gameplay important) 4. Music (mood, but duckable) 5. Ambient (lowest - can drop) ``` --- ## 2. Sound Design Decisions ### SFX Creation Approach | Approach | When to Use | Trade-offs | |----------|-------------|------------| | **Recording** | Realistic needs | High quality, time intensive | | **Synthesis** | Sci-fi, retro, UI | Unique, requires skill | | **Library samples** | Fast production | Common sounds, licensing | | **Layering** | Complex sounds | Best results, more work | ### Layering Structure | Layer | Purpose | Example: Gunshot | |-------|---------|------------------| | **Attack** | Initial transient | Click, snap | | **Body** | Main character | Boom, blast | | **Tail** | Decay, room | Reverb, echo | | **Sweetener** | Special sauce | Shell casing, mechanical | --- ## 3. Music Integration ### Music State System ``` Game State → Music Response │ ├── Menu → Calm, loopable theme ├── Exploration → Ambient, atmospheric ├── Combat detected → Transition to tension ├── Combat engaged → Full battle music ├── Victory → Stinger + calm transition ├── Defeat → Somber stinger └── Boss → Unique, multi-phase track ``` ### Transition Techniques | Technique | Use When | Feel | |-----------|----------|------| | **Crossfade** | Smooth mood shift | Gradual | | **Stinger** | Immediate event | Dramatic | | **Stem mixing** | Dynamic intensity | Seamless | | **Beat-synced** | Rhythmic gameplay | Musical | | **Queue point** | Next natural break | Clean | --- ## 4. Adaptive Audio Decisions ### Intensity Parameters | Parameter | Affects | Example | |-----------|---------|---------| | **Threat level** | Music intensity | Enemy count | | **Health** | Filter, reverb | Low health = muffled | | **Speed** | Tempo, energy | Racing speed | | **Environment** | Reverb, EQ | Cave vs outdoor | | **Time of day** | Mood, volume | Night = quieter | ### Vertical vs Horizontal | System | What Changes | Best For | |--------|--------------|----------| | **Vertical (layers)** | Add/remove instrument layers | Intensity scaling | | **Horizontal (segments)** | Different music sections | State changes | | **Combined** | Both | AAA adaptive scores | --- ## 5. 3D Audio Decisions ### Spatialization | Element | 3D Positioned? | Reason | |---------|----------------|--------| | Player footsteps | No (or subtle) | Always audible | | Enemy footsteps | Yes | Directional awareness | | Gunfire | Yes | Combat awareness | | Music | No | Mood, non-diegetic | | Ambient zone | Yes (area) | Environmental | | UI sounds | No | Interface feedback | ### Distance Behavior | Distance | Sound Behavior | |----------|----------------| | **Near** | Full volume, full frequency | | **Medium** | Volume falloff, high-freq rolloff | | **Far** | Low volume, low-pass filter | | **Max** | Silent or ambient hint | --- ## 6. Platform Considerations ### Format Selection | Platform | Recommended Format | Reason | |----------|-------------------|--------| | PC | OGG Vorbis, WAV | Quality, no licensing | | Console | Platform-specific | Certification | | Mobile | MP3, AAC | Size, compatibility | | Web | WebM/Opus, MP3 fallback | Browser support | ### Memory Budget | Game Type | Audio Budget | Strategy | |-----------|--------------|----------| | Mobile casual | 10-50 MB | Compressed, fewer variants | | PC indie | 100-500 MB | Quality focus | | AAA | 1+ GB | Full quality, many variants | --- ## 7. Mix Hierarchy ### Volume Balance Reference | Category | Relative Level | Notes | |----------|----------------|-------| | **Voice** | 0 dB (reference) | Always clear | | **Player SFX** | -3 to -6 dB | Prominent but not harsh | | **Music** | -6 to -12 dB | Foundation, ducks for voice | | **Enemy SFX** | -6 to -9 dB | Important but not dominant | | **Ambient** | -12 to -18 dB | Subtle background | ### Ducking Rules | When | Duck What | Amount | |------|-----------|--------| | Voice plays | Music, Ambient | -6 to -9 dB | | Explosion | All except explosion | Brief duck | | Menu open | Gameplay audio | -3 to -6 dB | --- ## 8. Anti-Patterns | Don't | Do | |-------|-----| | Play same sound repeatedly | Use variations (3-5 per sound) | | Max volume everything | Use proper mix hierarchy | | Ignore silence | Silence creates contrast | | One music track loops forever | Provide variety, transitions | | Skip audio in prototype | Placeholder audio matters | --- > **Remember:** 50% of the game experience is audio. A muted game loses half its soul.
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