You see green lumps of skin on the ground from the creature that piloted the spaceship, and you talk to some of the researchers working at the base who tell you that most of the other researchers are either sick or dead. "It Came From The Sky." The mission is about a spaceship that crashed near a research base on a frozen planet.Nearly always the result of your own actions too. The little ding that accompanies a planet's T-score dropping.The music for T0 planets is really eerie, it got reused in Galactic Adventures as "Echoes Underwater" (see below).The sound that plays when entering a planet controlled by a hostile empire is ear-grating, sudden, and can be unnerving to a young player.But the underlying sounds are still creepy. Of course, you can always find the singing to be Narm or even funny.if we can call it that, anyway, as it is comprised of nothing but a strange droning sound with static, bizarre guitar riffs and various random sounds before a disturbingly human-sounding off-key baritone singer makes his cue. When you finally meet the Grox, you can fly right above one of their cities to listen to their anthem.If you decide to use the Gadget Bomb, before target is locked, you will hear a radio static, while very tense music plays in the background, as if the game wants to signify that you are about to do something horrible Not to mention the Scare Chord that plays when you do lock the target.Similarly, when a vehicle is destroyed, if you zoom in, you can actually see its crew spill out and eventually die.If you're particularly unlucky, you might catch some citizens in their dying throes. If you conquer a city through Military means, the subsequent cutscene might include what appear to be dead civilian bodies.The tribe's species will most likely pop back up into the wild due to the game's generation.If the tribe was stationed near water, they'll run into it and stay there, giving the impression that they drowned themselves.They run around screaming like lunatics until they mysteriously die. The tribe members' reaction to their hut being destroyed.Hundreds of meteoroids then strike the land like burning hail as every animal in the land runs for cover. It's an asteroid and it just slammed into the planet. You look up in the sky and see something ominous. At first, you don't know what's happening, but seconds later, the sound of a Thunder Drum suddenly chime in as a blinding flash hits you. At any moment while you're trying to kill or socialize with your next target, everyone begins to randomly run away. On a similar vein, there's also the mass extinction event, especially on a first playthrough.Especially when the ship could abduct one of the creatures around you at any moment - it's no wonder why every other creature chooses to run when one shows up. Sure, you as the player know what's really going on when one shows up, especially once you've played the Space Stage and have experienced it from the ship's perspective, but as a creature on the ground who's completely helpless against whatever the ship might do, it's a great deal more worrying.
If you ever manage to kill off most if not all of the species on your continent, walking around the landscape littered with nothing but empty nests, and only the sounds of natural ambience or your own footsteps, can come off as equal parts serene and paranoia-inducing."UBD" note "Underground by Design", a movement by Spore users to make horror creations creations, which are some of the more.If you stray too far from shore into the ocean, a unique cutscene will play the camera looms away from your creature in the middle of the sea, and a sinister Drone of Dread plays.and then a giant sea monster emerges from under the water and eats your creature alive!.As a result, you could wander into what looks like an empty field only for an Epic to literally appear out of nowhere in front of you. It's even worse if you have the graphics set to high but have a graphics card that can't keep up occasionally, a creature will take some time to fully render."What was that roar? Why did a pack member vanish from the list?" You turn around and. They're bad enough if you're lucky enough to see them from afar, but it's surprisingly easy to not realize you're close to one until it's too late.