However, if you play the level "Death Wish" in any way other than going in guns blazing and fists swinging, you're doing it wrong. There are ways to slowly make your way through each level in Hotline Miami if you do not wish to die. This is by far the most intense track in the game. "This cocaine makes me feel like I'm on this song" You almost feel like you need to take a shower just by listening to this while in the prescence of these low lives. This track in particular, takes place during cutscenes where sinister protagonists conspire and recover from the previous misson. Not every great song in this game takes place during a bloodbath. This track makes the player truly feel like a superhero as they mow down felons through a prison to face a boss at the end of the level. Nothing quite says prison break like a song that begins relatively calm but then builds up to one of the most intense, heartrate-increasing tracks featured in a game. With its repetitive rhythm and bass, this song perfectly captures the essence of a silent, stone-cold protagonist going room to room and clearing a building of scum (violently). This one is straight out of Nicolas Winding Refn's Drive. This change of pace is ominous and makes us think that there is impending doom waiting at the end of the level.
Pig man saving spaghetti girl Hotline Miami OST. What makes this track especially unsettling is how it contrasts with the more upbeat, fast paced tracks featured in the other levels of the game. The history of the relation of male and female human animals. This haunting track is eerily reminiscent of The Exorcist, and it sends a chill down your spine as you punch and shoot and fight your way through a mob house. In this article, we take a look at the top five tracks that pump us up in Hotline Miami 2: Wrong Number.