Henry’s Theme | Dayshift At Freddy’s 3 OST

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Published 2019-02-08

All Comments (21)
  • @singularman5
    Credit to DirectDoggo for this very nice soundtrack. Link to their twitter is in the description. Edit: I also put the game itself in the description. So if anyone is new to this, go play the games :) Edit2: it honestly surprises me that so many people still come back to this video (even the creator I think lol) it's almost at 200k views which makes me question how but cool. thanks, and have a good day or night :p
  • There's something just so appealing about Henry as a villain. Maybe it's this haunting yet somewhat playful melody that plays when he speaks, maybe it's his grandiose sense of self importance, and maybe it's because he makes genuinely good points when he's deconstructing the party in his boss fight. Or hell, maybe it's that smile. That damned smile.
  • @leavenedits5399
    The way "Miller" his voice gets pronounced with the text to speech allways sounds so dark.
  • @Fancaro
    I just found this music in my recommendations, and it makes me want to play DSAF again It was like... One of the best fan games that I played. I really loved everything about the game, and hearing this song again reminded me how much Henry was a good villain.
  • @henrymiller5068
    “What good is living forever, when air feels like it’s on fire and every nerve pulses through jagged metal and crudely stitched together leather?”
  • Y’know, I just want to forget everything about this game, and go through it just once again.
  • @Xenon7567
    I love DirectDoggo's rendition of Henry
  • I absolutely love the contrast between Dave and Henry's themes and how they display their characters. Dave, despite having very charged reasons to hurt the Fazbear corporation, is quite the goofball, hence his theme being a song from a literal Rugrats game. Dave doesn't take himself or his actions too seriously, as his dream was already destroyed. In his mind, what does he have to be serious about? Henry on the other hand, his true "dream" never died. This rendition has a sense of joy and nostalgia to it that a quick read of the comments section can verify is felt by many. Henry enjoyed hurting others, and had a sense of grandiosity in his own mind. Thus, a classic waltz by Chopin becomes a perfect theme for Henry, as it was joyful and grand, just like Henry was in his own mind.
  • @SoftMocha123
    I have to say, This is a very creepy tune. It gives off more of a Henry Emily Vibe, like a music box that's really old and oddly familiar. Like a song that sounds kinda sad and more of the past, and a odd vibe of someone you've loved, or something gone. Does anyone else think that?
  • @Lechgang
    Possibly the most terrifying thing about Henry is that for the entirety of DSAF, he is dead. Not just dead as in springlocked and zombified, no, he's just not around. The most powerful forces in DSAF went out of their way to get rid of him as quickly as possible so he couldn't do any more damage. But his influence is always there. I think I still prefer Dave and Kiddie Strangler Jack as villains, but Henry is easily the most threatening.
  • @kaboom7208
    This is, and forever will be, extremely nostalgic
  • @Charlie_E
    Henry really gives words can kill a new meaning
  • I think the reason this is so haunting, is how slow it is. The reverbe. Like hearing an old tape playing through the empty halls of was once a place of joy
  • @oldsport3511
    I love playing this piece on the piano, but it sounds so much cooler like this! (Chopin Waltz in A minor if anyone didn’t know)
  • @alfredopasta7138
    You know after reading Henry's backstory, I've started thinking that in a way, Henry can also be seen as a somewhat tragic character like everyone else in Dayshift. Direct Doggo explained that Henry was raised by his drunk, authoritarian, and likely abusive father, and that Henry had hated his father. There was seemingly no mother figure in Henry's younger life. Could it be that due to his upbringing Henry simply never learned how to love someone? He didn't really seem to be raised with love by his father, so it could be that Henry just didn't know how to feel that emotion, and because he simply couldn't care about others, then that resulted in a lack of empathy, and therefore made it way simpler for Henry to do his many many murders. Now of course, this does not justify Henry's actions or make him "redeemable" by any chance, no matter what way you look at it Henry still choose to be the way that he was, and he had clearly been shown love by others in his adult life, a love which he outright rejected. But at the same time his loveless childhood was likely a big factor in his behavior, and slightly helps humanize Henry, as it makes him seem less like the devil on earth, and more like someone who was just never treated well and therefore treated others even more horribly. Just something that I've been thinking about recently and that I wanted to share with others.
  • @Txsky28
    for some reason this music is nostalgic, happy, sad, dark and giving the sense of having heard it before, and i like it
  • @impinator-z4085
    This gives a weird sense of nostalgia; it also feels very dsaf (and yeah I know it is from dsaf but it just really feels like it).
  • you know, dsaf really is special most villains, i can understand most villains, i want to see memes with them and laugh with them most villains, i can give them 1 - 2 headcannons and consider them good characters but henry he just fucking scares me, and no villain in videogames has ever done that before