CELEBRATION V2 (ft. @KOBAIKIDNEW) - Analog Funkin' OST

CELEBRATION V2 (ft. @KOBAIKIDNEW) - Analog Funkin' OST

#backrooms #creepy #fnf ‪@the_bron‬ I see you WHERE'S MY ABDUCTION FLP??? One of the ONLY songs I made for analog :sad: PLAY THE MOD NOW!!! https://gamebanana.com/mods/381966 YES ME AND @KOBAIKIDNEW (https://x.com/kobai_kid) MADE THIS SONG No you cannot just reupload this song lmao Thumbnail by Deathwish: https://x.com/MrDeathWishFNF\ Discord Community Server:   / discord   Mod Twitter: https://x.com/ANALOGFUNKINFNF _________________________________________________________________________ Analog Funkin' is a Friday Night Funkin' mod that revolves around popular analog horror series such as Local58 by Kris Straub, The Walten Files by Martin Walls, Vita Carnis, and more. The mod is directed by Tack and co-directed by Chase Redding and DeathWish. In January 2022, a short horror film titled "The Backrooms (Found Footage)" was uploaded to YouTube. Created by then-16-year-old Kane Parsons of Northern California, known online as Kane Pixels, it is presented as a VHS tape recorded by a filmmaker who accidentally enters the Backrooms in the 1990s and is pursued by a monster.[20][21] Parsons used the software Blender and Adobe After Effects to create the environment of the Backrooms, and it took him a month to complete it. He described the Backrooms as a manifestation of a poorly remembered recollection of the late 90s and early 2000s.[2][3] The video has over 66 million views as of April 2025.[22][23] Friday Night Funkin' is an upcoming rhythm video game developed by Funkin' Crew Inc. and released on Newgrounds in 2020.[4] The game is developed by a small group consisting primarily of Cameron "ninjamuffin99" Taylor, David "PhantomArcade" Brown, Isaac "Kawai Sprite" Garcia, and evilsk8r. The game is also open-source.[a] It shares some gameplay features with Dance Dance Revolution, PaRappa the Rapper, and the "Dance Contest" minigame from Club Penguin, and borrows aesthetic influences from Flash games.[5] The game has been credited with driving users back to Newgrounds, a site that rose in popularity in the early 2000s.[6][7][8]