Post by Red Hairdo on Dec 15, 2012 3:12:01 GMT -5
So! I was meant to post this roughly a month ago, but I dragged on the last step needed before uploading this and after decrypting all the FSB files... But now it's here.
What is here?
All music and sound effects found in Ys Online!
Part 1: www.mediafire.com/?5fgi9wlaouvgflf
Part 2: www.mediafire.com/?9h8occxj2d84pvb
Part 3: www.mediafire.com/?ua9t9bv5ydj62e1
Part 4: www.mediafire.com/?vcdxd5ifocayq3g
Part 5: www.mediafire.com/?c111yq8jvekg8v1
I managed to pull this only with the developer of the Music Player Ex program, because he gave me hints and provided support through the process of decrypting the FSB files of Ys Online. In the end it turned out I never got the right password before, and that was it: what happened was that the program for decrypting and "converting" the FSB files was never able to detect whether you got the password wrong or right, unless if it was wrong within the first 3 characters. If you get the first 3 characters right or more, you get errors other than "wrong password", all of which made no sense. '-_- There was no way that still meant the password was wrong, though, unless if you really were aware of how FSB encryption works, which the Music Player Ex developer did. Apparently FSB encryption is very simple and weak, and uses a form of encryption called xor encryption.
Final password for all Ys Online FSB files turned out to be "tkdnsem000". It wasn't hard to discover it after I was told FSB File Extractor could check at least "the first 3 or maybe even 4 characters", whether they were right or not. Turned out to be 3, I think.
Anyway. The program used even was nice enough to "guess" the extension of the sound files (all turned out to be MP3s; There's an algorithm in its code to rename its extension accordingly), although all the file names originally either had a WAV extension or simply no extension at all. If you manually change them to WAVs, they all will work, but it seemed to lower the quality of the sound by a little bit, at least for the files that were originally extensionless, so I left them all as they were in the end.
Later I'll specificaly upload the OST of the game. All the tracks, by the way, are named in a descriptive way rather than using their real names: some of the tracks' real names can be uncovered by checking the half-complete OST provided by the YsOL EU publisher from before, KeyToPlay, though. I'll make sure to do so later.
What else... I didn't identify "Burning Sword" within the files: it appeared as a mute sound file in the YsOL EU OST, but properly named and with proper length, as well. Unless if it's there somewhere in those game sound files I extracted but I didn't recognize it. Among unused music files, I found just one or the other or so, although a track or two, while played in-game, only have had their, say, first 10 seconds played, out of 2-ish minutes, so it's like unused tracks when you play them entirely this way.
Lastly, I'd like to state that many of the original Ys Online tracks are as good as and sometimes even better than some of the classic Ys tracks remixed in this game. For such an MMO, it kind of has a truly impressive soundtrack.
What is here?
All music and sound effects found in Ys Online!
Part 1: www.mediafire.com/?5fgi9wlaouvgflf
Part 2: www.mediafire.com/?9h8occxj2d84pvb
Part 3: www.mediafire.com/?ua9t9bv5ydj62e1
Part 4: www.mediafire.com/?vcdxd5ifocayq3g
Part 5: www.mediafire.com/?c111yq8jvekg8v1
I managed to pull this only with the developer of the Music Player Ex program, because he gave me hints and provided support through the process of decrypting the FSB files of Ys Online. In the end it turned out I never got the right password before, and that was it: what happened was that the program for decrypting and "converting" the FSB files was never able to detect whether you got the password wrong or right, unless if it was wrong within the first 3 characters. If you get the first 3 characters right or more, you get errors other than "wrong password", all of which made no sense. '-_- There was no way that still meant the password was wrong, though, unless if you really were aware of how FSB encryption works, which the Music Player Ex developer did. Apparently FSB encryption is very simple and weak, and uses a form of encryption called xor encryption.
Final password for all Ys Online FSB files turned out to be "tkdnsem000". It wasn't hard to discover it after I was told FSB File Extractor could check at least "the first 3 or maybe even 4 characters", whether they were right or not. Turned out to be 3, I think.
Anyway. The program used even was nice enough to "guess" the extension of the sound files (all turned out to be MP3s; There's an algorithm in its code to rename its extension accordingly), although all the file names originally either had a WAV extension or simply no extension at all. If you manually change them to WAVs, they all will work, but it seemed to lower the quality of the sound by a little bit, at least for the files that were originally extensionless, so I left them all as they were in the end.
Later I'll specificaly upload the OST of the game. All the tracks, by the way, are named in a descriptive way rather than using their real names: some of the tracks' real names can be uncovered by checking the half-complete OST provided by the YsOL EU publisher from before, KeyToPlay, though. I'll make sure to do so later.
What else... I didn't identify "Burning Sword" within the files: it appeared as a mute sound file in the YsOL EU OST, but properly named and with proper length, as well. Unless if it's there somewhere in those game sound files I extracted but I didn't recognize it. Among unused music files, I found just one or the other or so, although a track or two, while played in-game, only have had their, say, first 10 seconds played, out of 2-ish minutes, so it's like unused tracks when you play them entirely this way.
Lastly, I'd like to state that many of the original Ys Online tracks are as good as and sometimes even better than some of the classic Ys tracks remixed in this game. For such an MMO, it kind of has a truly impressive soundtrack.