We talk a lot about video games on this site, but this does not mean that we do not have much love and respect for the world of tabletop gaming. There is nothing like sitting around the fight map with some friends and going to an adventure work together, and if you can make it easier to be lost in that world, all are better.
If you are watching a GM to run a magnificent game, the audio is a major tool in your list of performances. The music that fits into the scene can add a ton to feel the experience immersive and cinematic. This is often a strange, though. Finding the tracks you want to use, ordering them properly, trying to find out when to switch tracks, fix the volume so that you burn your players’ earrings, and strange, trying to avoid sudden infection.
It is quite difficult with VTT that provides audio, but it is also difficult if you are playing in the person. When you have to keep an eye on everything else in the sports world, you do not want to give tension on your audio.
Enter the tabletop tunes.
Music for your adventures

The purpose of this TTPRG-focused music app is to populate your world with thematic tracks and make it easier to keep your adventure background audio with no obstruction, strange transitions, or disappointing conclusions.
There are tracks from different parts of the world depending on the location. If you want some town music, while party shopping? Check the town section. Are they passing through a deep woodland? The forest is what you need.
Dynamic fights
Our favorite bit is the battle music section. It has a match music track, which is organized by enemy levels. If you are trying to kill mice in someone’s basement? You can choose light fighter music.
To kill a dragon? You need boss music.
This is not just a regular track. Each intensity comes with a slider that you can change as things heated. So if it turns out that mice have got hands, then you are ready.
Then, once the match becomes close, you have many finished options that eliminate the music of the war, rather than just strange and anomatic switching tracks. There is one for a spectacular victory, for a crushed necklace, and for one if the party runs away from the basement.
All this runs the Combat Super Smuth, Audio-Wise anyway. This cannot help you organize turn order or keep an eye on the state block.
Environmental atmosphere

The available audio is not limited to music only, either. If you want weather effects, then the sound of animals, cracks of a camp fire, roar in swings and battles. All this is on your fingers, and is easy to use remarkably, even on the spot.
There is another feature, the magic soundtrack assistant that lets you enter a storyline prompt, and it will keep a soundtrack together for you.
The music of the app is completely created by a real person, not through Jeanai. The soundtrack uses AI to understand and process the accessories, but the tracks are all from the brain of a human musician.
It is currently quite medieval-theme, but more material is on the way, in which various styles such as SCIFI and horror are coming soon. There are also plans for VTT and discord integration for online games.
Tabletop tunes are set to be available in your browser through both mobile and web apps. If you are interested in trying a sample of tabletop tunes for free, you can see it Click hereWhich comes with some tracks to test. This service is currently membership-based, although a hybrid pricing model allowing for a time will be released very soon.

