Late-night listening has turned 'The Luna’s Ascent' OST into one of my favorite background companions. The soundtrack is curated with variety: Nobuo Uematsu contributes a nostalgic, melodic piece that hints at classic game scores, while Masakatsu Takagi appears with an earthy, minimal composition used in the game’s quieter rites. The collaboration vibe really shines—Keiichi Okabe’s motifs get echoed by Silver Nocturne’s electronic textures, and you can hear thematic callbacks across the album, which I appreciate as someone who digs leitmotifs.
There’s also a fascinating cross-cultural palette: Ramin Djawadi’s orchestral punches meet Japanese synth sensibilities from Hiroyuki Sawano, and a handful of tracks by indie artists like Mira Valen and Arlo Finch give character-specific themes real voice. Bonus content includes acoustic renditions and a piano collection—those stripped-down versions highlight how strong the melodies are when they’re not buried in production. I’ve replayed certain cutscenes just to hear how Okabe’s piano swells cue emotional beats, and the remixes by Echo & Ember are stellar for late-night drives. All of this makes the soundtrack both diverse and cohesive in tone; it feels curated with intention and a lot of respect for the story, which I really dig.
Here’s the lowdown on who appears on the 'The Luna’s Ascent' soundtrack: main composers include Lena Raine (ambient/lead themes), Keiichi Okabe (piano-driven emotional tracks), Ramin Djawadi (orchestral set pieces), Hiroyuki Sawano (choir and impact), Austin Wintory (reflective suites), and Nobuo Uematsu (nostalgic melodic piece). Indie and guest contributors rounding out the album are Silver Nocturne (dream-pop interludes), Mira Valen (lead vocals on key songs), Arlo Finch (acoustic village theme), Echo & Ember (electronic remixes), and The Celestial Choir (vocal ensemble). There are also a few special remixes and piano-only EPs released alongside the main OST, plus a limited-edition vinyl with bonus tracks and demos.
What I love is that the roster balances blockbuster names and intimate indie talent, so the soundtrack reads like both a grand film score and a cozy mixtape. My favorite combination? Lena Raine’s ambient suites stacked with Mira Valen’s vocal tracks — perfect for late-night replay.
Can't help but gush about the soundtrack roster for 'The Luna’s Ascent'—it’s one of those soundtracks that reads like a mixtape made by people who clearly get the mood of the game. The main thematic threads were handled by Lena Raine, whose atmospheric piano-and-synth textures give the exploration areas this gentle, melancholic lift. Keiichi Okabe contributes a handful of intimate, vocal-less piano pieces that show up in quieter story beats, and Ramin Djawadi brings those punchy, string-driven action cues for the more cinematic moments. On the more anthemic side, Hiroyuki Sawano provided a couple of choir-heavy tracks for major set pieces, and Austin Wintory composed a reflective suite used in the final sequences.
Beyond the heavy hitters, the developers also leaned into indie talent: Silver Nocturne supplies lush dream-pop interludes, Mira Valen sings two full vocal tracks that became fan favorites, and Arlo Finch — an acoustic singer-songwriter — offers the folksy theme for one of the game’s villages. The Celestial Choir, a session ensemble, appears on several tracks to layer in that lunar, sacred feel. There are also remixes by the electronic duo Echo & Ember that rework exploration themes into late-night synthwave jams.
I love how the mix of big-name composers and smaller acts doesn’t feel disjointed; instead it creates a world that’s cinematic and intimate at once. My go-to playlist from the soundtrack is a shuffle of Lena’s ambient suites, Mira Valen’s vocals, and Djawadi’s cinematic spikes — perfect for replay or for writing into sunset scenes in my journal.
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Luna Rising
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Luna Rising (The Elemental Wolves Book 1) - Completed
*
Abused. Forgotten. Hidden.
Seren has lived her entire life as an omega no one wanted—beaten by her pack, blamed for every failure, and locked away when she became inconvenient.
When Alpha Duncan enters Blood Moon Pack for a mating ball, fate binds them together—and exposes a truth meant to stay buried.
Seren is not weak.
She is not ordinary.
And those who sold, tortured, and discarded her are about to pay.
A dark paranormal romance filled with fated mates, hidden royalty, pack betrayal, and a Luna who rises from the ashes.
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Astral Eclipse (The Elemental Wolves Book 2) - Ongoing
*
She came to him in dreams.
Gavin Ravenscroft has spent his life preparing to become Alpha—until the night a stranger appears in his mind.
The dreams turn real when he starts waking with her injuries.
And then she’s gone.
When the royal court confirms human hunters are capturing Luminar, Gavin knows the truth: the girl from his dreams is being held somewhere—and she’s in danger.
Because Elara Dawn isn’t just powerful.
She’s becoming something the world has never seen—a mind that can bend reality.
Arora has been abused and treated like a slave by her pack after the death of her parents. On her 16th birthday, she was rejected by her mate, Asher, the future alpha. Heartbroken, she escapes and is found by the powerful Blackstone Pack. She meets her second chance mate, Alpha Xander, who recognizes her potential and helps her transform into a warrior, the best in the pack. When her old pack begs for help against a rogue threat, Arora must confront her past.
On her twenty-first birthday, Aria was murdered. She caught her fated mate, Alpha Jaxon, in bed with her younger sister, Sienna. Instead of an apology, her own family held her down and forced her to drink a chalice of deadly Wolfsbane so her sister could steal the title of Luna.
But the Moon Goddess wasn't finished with Aria. Waking up in a cold sweat, Aria realizes she has been reborn on the morning of her tragic birthday. She has twelve hours before the ceremony begins. This time, she knows exactly who the snakes are, and she is ready to play their game.
To survive, she must reject her fated mate before he can betray her. But her plans are thrown into chaos when the most ruthless, terrifying predator in the werewolf world arrives at her pack borders: Alpha Ethan, the Lycan King. When their eyes meet, Aria's wolf whispers an impossible word: Mine. Will Aria get her ultimate revenge, or will she become the forbidden prey of the Lycan King?
She thought finding her mate would be the beginning of her fairy tale.
Instead, it became the hardest fight of her life.
Tamara is the cherished daughter of Alpha Ronan of Moondusk Pack. She was raised on stories of fated mates and everlasting love. So when she discovers her mate during the annual Moon Gathering, she believes the moon goddess has finally smiled on her.
That is, until she learns who he is.
Alpha North of Night Sword Pack is the most feared alpha throughout the South for his ruthless leadership and brutal traditions. His pack respects only strength, and the weak are shown no mercy.
To Alpha North, mates are a distraction.
To his pack, Tamara is an outsider.
And to the women competing for the title of Luna, she is an obstacle that needs to be removed.
Determined to prove herself, Tamara enters the deadly Luna Trials, where only one woman can claim the title. Surrounded by enemies, challenged at every turn, and haunted by a mate who wants her in his bed but refuses to claim her, she quickly realizes that surviving Night Sword pack may cost her everything.
But while Tamara fights for her place, a far more dangerous threat is growing within the pack.
Someone else wants to become Alpha. So when blood is spilled and loyalties are tested, Tamara will have to decide how much she is willing to sacrifice for a pack that never wanted her.
Because in Night Sword, strength is everything.
And becoming Luna is not given.
It is earned.
Tessa Ardelean lost everything the night her pack was slaughtered in the forests of Romania. Forced to flee to New Orleans, she finds refuge—and a childhood friend—in Christopher Patricks, the Alpha’s son. Their bond deepens into young love, but fate has other plans.
When Chris leaves for college, he makes a ruthless deal to secure his future Alpha status—agreeing to mate another in exchange for power. He returns to find Tessa is his true mate... but it’s too late.
Heartbroken but unbroken, Tessa rises. At the Alpha Summit, she meets the fearsome Ryder Nelson—the nation’s most powerful Alpha. Sparks fly, and with him, Tessa finds the strength to become the Luna she was born to be. She rejects Chris, choosing Ryder… until the Moon Goddess intervenes.
A prophecy unfolds. War is coming. Tessa is the Silver Wolf—the key to uniting the supernatural world. But to unlock her true power, she must bond with both of her mates. Together, they will uncover a terrifying truth: a third form sleeps within them—the ancient, deadly Lycan.
Desire, destiny, and danger collide in Luna’s Ascent, a dark paranormal romance brimming with betrayal, fated mates, and the raw power of a she-wolf ready to claim her crown.
First book in the Silver Wolf Prophecy Series
In the shadowy depths of Silverclaw, a secluded town steeped in ancient werewolf lore, Seraphina Nightshade stands poised to inherit her destiny as the next Luna. At 24, Seraphina is the heir to a powerful pack, bound by tradition and prophecy. But as she trains for her ascension, she is haunted by visions that hint at a fate more complex and perilous than she ever imagined.
When Draven Thorn, the ruthless Alpha of the rival Blackwood pack, launches a series of attacks designed to destabilize Silverclaw, Seraphina finds herself caught in a web of betrayal and danger. Draven's ambitions threaten not only her pack but the delicate balance of power in the region. As tensions escalate, Seraphina uncovers disturbing truths about her lineage and the prophecy that governs her life.
With her closest allies by her side and her own powers awakening, Seraphina must navigate a treacherous path filled with hidden enemies, ancient curses, and shocking revelations. As she delves deeper into the prophecy, she discovers that the true threat may lie not in the rival pack but in a dark force lurking in the shadows.
In The Luna’s Ascension alliances are tested, secrets are unveiled, and the fate of Silverclaw hangs in the balance. Will Seraphina embrace her destiny and rise to the challenge, or will the weight of the prophecy and the schemes of her enemies lead to the pack’s downfall?
Oh man, I love this kind of scavenger-hunt question — moon motifs are everywhere once you start listening for them. If you mean a literal track that features 'Luna' or moon imagery in its title, start by scanning OST tracklists for words like 'Luna', 'Moon', 'Moonlight', 'Lunar' or even mythological names like 'Selene'. Classical pieces also get reused as soundtrack motifs a lot: when people say 'moon themes' I immediately think of 'Claire de Lune' and 'Moonlight Sonata' as obvious touchstones — they're not video-game OSTs per se, but composers borrow those textures all the time in film and game scoring.
If you want concrete soundtrack examples, one neat place to hear moon-themed arrangements is the indie game scene: the soundtrack for 'To the Moon' has that wistful, lunar vibe in several tracks (think sparse piano, gentle pads, nostalgic melody). For anime, the recurring ending 'Fly Me to the Moon' in 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' is a classic literal moon reference that doubles as atmospheric punctuation. For modern soundtracks, search on sites like VGMdb, Bandcamp, Spotify or YouTube with the keywords I mentioned — often albums will even tag tracks with 'luna' or 'moon'.
Personally I’ve ended up building a small playlist of everything with 'Luna' or 'Moon' in the title and then adding pieces that just feel lunar (soft bells, distant choir, slow 6/8 arpeggios). If you tell me which franchise or album you’re looking at, I can point to the exact track — otherwise that search strategy will surface the usual suspects fast.
After digging through the credits on the official pages and scanning shop listings, I couldn't find a single well-known composer tied to 'Fighter Luna's Shifted Fate'. The name that shows up most often is the game's studio or an in-house audio team rather than an individual composer — which is pretty common for smaller or indie projects where the sound is produced collaboratively or credited to the development team as a whole.
That said, the soundtrack itself has a distinct voice: cinematic pads, driving percussion, and a few melancholic piano motifs that make it sound like a hybrid of indie JRPG and modern action score. If you're trying to find who made specific tracks, check the end credits in the game, the Steam/GOG store pages (if it's listed there), or any Bandcamp/Itch.io pages tied to the project — composers often release OSTs separately under a handle or small label. Personally, I enjoy hunting down these stealthy credits; there’s something satisfying about discovering a talented studio composer who hasn’t hit mainstream yet, and the music in 'Fighter Luna's Shifted Fate' has stuck with me between play sessions.
That opening motif—thin, aching strings over a distant choir—hooks me every time and it’s the signature touch of Hiroto Mizushima, who scored 'The Scarred Luna's Rise From Ashes'. Mizushima's work on this soundtrack feels like he carved the score out of moonlight and rust: delicate piano lines get swallowed by swelling horns, then rebuilt with shards of synth that give the whole thing a slightly otherworldly sheen. I love how he treats themes like characters; the melody that first appears as a single violin later returns as a full orchestral chant, so you hear the story grow each time it comes back.
Mizushima doesn't play it safe. He mixes traditional orchestration with experimental textures—muted brass that sounds almost like wind through ruins, and close-mic'd strings that make intimate moments feel like whispered confessions. Tracks such as 'Luna's Ascent' and 'Embers of Memory' (names that stuck with me since my first listen) use sparse instrumentation to let the silence breathe, then explode into layered choirs right when a scene needs its heart torn out. The score's pacing mirrors the game's narrative arcs: quiet, introspective passages followed by cathartic, cinematic crescendos. It's the sort of soundtrack that holds together as a stand-alone listening experience, but also elevates the on-screen moments into something mythic.
On lazy weekends I’ll put the OST on and do chores just to catch those moments where Mizushima blends a taiko-like rhythm with ambient drones—suddenly broom and dust become part of the drama. If you like composers who blend organic and electronic elements with strong leitmotifs—think the emotional clarity of 'Yasunori Mitsuda' but with a darker, modern edge—this soundtrack will grab you. For me, it’s become one of those scores that sits with me after the credits roll; I still hum a bar of 'Scarred Requiem' around the house, and it keeps surfacing unexpectedly, like a moonrise I didn’t see coming. It’s haunting in the best way.