Hockey fans might think theyâre hearing a familiar sound in Fart Cat, the rude-and-crude mobile game that released last week, when they finish off a level and the titular feline floats an air biscuit into the basket. And theyâd be correct. That is the bleat of the same horn the St. Louis Blues use to celebrate a goal in the NHL.
More specifically, itâs a modified sound file of the report of the Kahlenberg KM-135 arena horn, which blares every time the Blues dent the twine at Scottrade Center. Fart Cat developer Summer Camp Studios wanted something distinct, something cathartic, something ⊠loud to communicate the ultimate dispersal of Fart Catâs apocalyptic flatulence, and in early designs of the game its creators came to the realization that only a big ass fog horn would do. Thatâs how Summer Camp came to âauditionâ goal horns used at NHL arenas.
âWe knew we wanted to end each level with giant, pungent clouds of fart, and took to calling it the âPeggle Fart,â said Summer Campâs Rich Gallup. â[Peggle] does such an amazing job of joyfully celebrating the playerâs success by blasting Ode to Joy over fireworks and rainbows when a stage is cleared. As a longtime hockey fan and player, it was a quick leap to realize the ideal analog for our megafart, with banks of green fog rolling in, would be a hockey goal horn.â
After that creative decision was made, someone at Summer Camp found this item on Kotaku sister publication Deadspin, which pointed readers to an audio collection of every NHL arena horn. From there, Gallup selected ones he thought fit the end-of-stage tenor described above, and spontaneously blasted the best ones over speakers to the rest of the office. âMost of them made us laugh, but we werenât convinced a goal horn was the way to go until we hooked them into our project,â Gallup said. âThat sold us, and then it became a matter of picking our favorite.â
https://deadspin.com/here-listen-to-all-30-nhl-teams-goal-horns-5794923
But why use a hockey arena horn? This is a game that unashamedly lets it rip with fart sound effects throughout play. âWe donât have too many gross fart sounds and didnât want our Peggle Fart to be an exception,â Gallup said. âThe goal horn felt like the perfect mix of ridiculous, funny, celebratory, a good contextual fit, and so loud that kids could drive people crazy with it.â
St. Louis was one of four finalists, along with Tampa Bay, Boston and Buffalo. Tampaâs was âtoo long,â said Gallup; Bostonâs âis too short, while St. Louisâs rolls on in that unceasing manner, and breaks it up with those two quick beats in the middle.â
Of course, thereâs the matter of licensing and lawyers. Summer Camp said it tried contacting the St. Louis Blues but were unsuccessful, possibly because âthey were too caught up in all of their postseason awards.â (St Louis lost in the second round of the playoffs.) Without the Blues aboard, Summer Camp was looking at finding another horn. They contemplated a promotion with a minor league hockey team but ânone of them could compare to that St. Louis sound.â
Until, however, someone at the studio discovered a ship horn collectorâs community, through which they learned that the Blues use the Kahlenberg KM-135. The studio went to Kahlenbergâs official site, found a sound file, took a snippet of the audio, âchopped it up, stretched it out and added some reverb until it sounded similar to the St. Louis horn,â Gallup said. âWe changed the file so much we felt safe using it in the game.
âWe love that horn so much that if Fart Cat made enough money where it would be worth anybodyâs time to sue us, we would be too busy spending all of that money on our own KM-135 and a sweet pick-up truck to put it in.â
Why, however, go to these lengths for a 99 cent game? Why not just find some other boat horn from a soundfile site?
âAlthough we are the first to say that Fart Cat is a silly, doofy game, it also represents the first product a group of veteran game developers have shipped in years,â said Gallup, himself a former producer at 38 Studios, which folded in May. âWe wanted to be proud of Summer Camp Studioâs debut effort, and that included spending keen attention to even the littlest of details. This would be our gameâs signature moment, and it needed to represent the gameâs irreverence and professionalism.
https://lastchance.cc/38-studios-and-big-huge-games-shutting-down-update-5913102%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E