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Steam News29 September 20259mo ago

Musical Incantations - Devlog #05

You might remember me from the first devlog as one of the co-founders of Strangers. But today, I want to introduce you to another side of me: Vincent the composer and musician.

In this update2

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Full Trailblazers: Into the March update

Read the full published notes in a cleaner layout. The original post stays linked below.

What changed

0 fixes2 additions2 changes0 removals
  • Gameplay
  • UI and audio
addedHow it all began (with a piano)Let me take you through my journey of how I discovered composition and made it an essential part of who I am. It didn't really start as a passion to be honest. More like a chore. I started learning piano at the age of 7. I didn’t really have a choice—it was that or suffer humiliation on a football field. I wasn’t a great student. I didn’t practice, I didn’t enjoy lessons… until one day, a teacher introduced me to basic improvisation.
changedHow it all began (with a piano)That changed everything. Suddenly, I could create something. I quickly began exploring composition on my own. For a couple of years, I filled floppy disks with music written on the 5-track sequencer of our Technics digital piano. I still remember the process perfectly… and the endless amount of bad music I produced. I had to hit the “Song Clear” button so many times—but it was a great learning experience.
changedHow it all began (with a piano)At 15, I took the next big step and bought a SoundBlaster sound card. Suddenly, I was spending all my time between Cubase and the Internet—family PC quickly became my PC and the telephone line became a dedicated line for the slow and painful transfer of internet data. From there, I never really stopped. I went through all sorts of musical phases: rock, experimental music, techno, an obsession with synths and drum machines, endless plugin collecting, spending more time wiring gear than actually playing, live music, drums or singing.
addedIncantations for TrailblazersComposing for a game was new territory for me. To shape the musical world of Trailblazers: Into the March , I first needed to understand the March itself: its people, technology, culture. Did they have instruments? Music notation? Was music ritualistic? Entertainment? Both?

Trailblazers: Into the March changes

addedLet me take you through my journey of how I discovered composition and made it an essential part of who I am. It didn't really start as a passion to be honest. More like a chore. I started learning piano at the age of 7. I didn’t really have a choice—it was that or suffer humiliation on a football field. I wasn’t a great student. I didn’t practice, I didn’t enjoy lessons… until one day, a teacher introduced me to basic improvisation.
changedThat changed everything. Suddenly, I could create something. I quickly began exploring composition on my own. For a couple of years, I filled floppy disks with music written on the 5-track sequencer of our Technics digital piano. I still remember the process perfectly… and the endless amount of bad music I produced. I had to hit the “Song Clear” button so many times—but it was a great learning experience.
changedAt 15, I took the next big step and bought a SoundBlaster sound card. Suddenly, I was spending all my time between Cubase and the Internet—family PC quickly became my PC and the telephone line became a dedicated line for the slow and painful transfer of internet data. From there, I never really stopped. I went through all sorts of musical phases: rock, experimental music, techno, an obsession with synths and drum machines, endless plugin collecting, spending more time wiring gear than actually playing, live music, drums or singing.
addedComposing for a game was new territory for me. To shape the musical world of Trailblazers: Into the March , I first needed to understand the March itself: its people, technology, culture. Did they have instruments? Music notation? Was music ritualistic? Entertainment? Both?

You might remember me from the first devlog as one of the co-founders of Strangers. But today, I want to introduce you to another side of me: Vincent the composer and musician. For Trailblazers: Into the March, I handle both the business side (a fancy way of saying I mostly deal with accounting and contracts) and the music composition. Since the start of the project, I’ve had very little time to focus on music—but that’s finally changing. So let’s talk about it.

How it all began (with a piano)

Let me take you through my journey of how I discovered composition and made it an essential part of who I am. It didn't really start as a passion to be honest. More like a chore. I started learning piano at the age of 7. I didn’t really have a choice—it was that or suffer humiliation on a football field. I wasn’t a great student. I didn’t practice, I didn’t enjoy lessons… until one day, a teacher introduced me to basic improvisation.

That changed everything. Suddenly, I could create something. I quickly began exploring composition on my own. For a couple of years, I filled floppy disks with music written on the 5-track sequencer of our Technics digital piano. I still remember the process perfectly… and the endless amount of bad music I produced. I had to hit the “Song Clear” button so many times—but it was a great learning experience.

Should I delete what I just did or keep it?

At 15, I took the next big step and bought a SoundBlaster sound card. Suddenly, I was spending all my time between Cubase and the Internet—family PC quickly became my PC and the telephone line became a dedicated line for the slow and painful transfer of internet data. From there, I never really stopped. I went through all sorts of musical phases: rock, experimental music, techno, an obsession with synths and drum machines, endless plugin collecting, spending more time wiring gear than actually playing, live music, drums or singing.

Incantations for Trailblazers

Composing for a game was new territory for me. To shape the musical world of Trailblazers: Into the March, I first needed to understand the March itself: its people, technology, culture. Did they have instruments? Music notation? Was music ritualistic? Entertainment? Both?

I dreamed of inventing a world with its own rules.

In this case

its own music . I dug through books on trance music, ritual music, and more. I spent a long time in the realm of ideas before writing a single note, trying to invent musical “rules” for this world.

In the end… only fragments remained

the atmosphere, the instrumentation. But that was enough.

Trailblazers and the company kept me busy in many other areas, so real work on the music didn’t start until 2025. It all began in January, during a mountain trip. I brought a small MIDI keyboard and a notebook and worked at night after everyone was asleep. That week, I wrote five incantations - as I have decided to call them. My goal was to write music that could be sung by the crew members around the heart of the ship - in a kind of magical act of healing the heart.

Early Heart Key Art

The location of this trip was fitting: the Swiss Prealps are home to faiseurs de secret —local healers said to stop bleeding, cure warts, even help find lost objects. I think every composer secretly dreams their music will feel like magic. That it

Source

Steam News / 29 September 2025

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