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Warframe: The Old Peace (Official Soundtrack)

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Platforms: iOS, PS4, PS5, Switch, Switch 2, Windows, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S
Year: 2025
Catalog Number: N/A
Published by: Digital Extremes

Number of Files: 12
Total Filesize: 90 MB (MP3), 303 MB (FLAC)
Date Added: Jun 14th, 2026
Album type: Soundtrack
Uploaded by: Kazaki123

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Download all songs at once: click to download (FLAC+MP3)
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  # Song Name MP3 FLAC    
 
1. Lullaby of the Manifold 3:14 6.57 MB 21.98 MB get_app
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2. Lullaby of the Manifold (Piano Version) 2:03 3.76 MB 13.00 MB get_app
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3. Flowers Fall 6:36 11.91 MB 38.84 MB get_app
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4. Deepest Dark 6:37 13.45 MB 44.16 MB get_app
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5. Ironclad 4:37 9.12 MB 32.81 MB get_app
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6. The Cardinal Calls 1:26 2.71 MB 10.78 MB get_app
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7. Roses From The Abyss 6:00 11.97 MB 44.53 MB get_app
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8. Executor 3:03 6.31 MB 22.51 MB get_app
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9. The Unremembered 4:22 9.27 MB 30.46 MB get_app
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10. His Light 2:21 4.38 MB 13.32 MB get_app
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11. Lullaby of the Manifold (Dusk) 3:09 5.79 MB 18.27 MB get_app
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12. Decrypted 2:47 5.17 MB 12.48 MB get_app
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Description

Warframe: The Old Peace (Official Soundtrack) follows Update 41’s journey back to Tau and the Perita moon, where a fragile ceasefire between the Orokin and the Sentients once held. The quest asks the Tenno to step into buried memories: a childhood spent in trenches on Tau, a Sentient friend named Adis, the Dax Anarch rebellion, and the battles that turn the “Old Peace” into just another bloody chapter of the Old War. Through the Dark Refractory and the new modes – The Perita Rebellion and Descendia – those memories become playable war stories. Matthew Chalmers’ score leans into that World War I–inspired setting with militaristic percussion, haunted strings, and choral writing built around a single song, “Lullaby of the Manifold,” which in-game is sung to calm and heal Sentients and, for a moment, make the trenches of Tau feel survivable.

“Lullaby of the Manifold” and its offshoots are the emotional spine of the album. The main version opens the soundtrack as Adis’s signature song. This fragile-peace hymn begins as an intimate lullaby and gradually grows into a complete orchestral statement of what the Old Peace was meant to be. The piano version strips the battlefield away and leaves only the melody and voice, like a memory replayed in the Operator’s mind during quieter scenes in the Dark Refractory. Much later, “Lullaby of the Manifold (Dusk)” returns that same tune in a lower, more exhausted light, as if the promise it once carried has been worn down by everything the Tenno has seen on Tau. Together, these three tracks frame the entire update, from naïve hope to hard-earned, post-war reflection.

Around that song, the score dives into the mud and metal of the Perita front. “Flowers Fall” feels written for the no-man’s-land vistas of The Perita Rebellion: muddy trenches, barbed wire, and strange Tau flora growing over craters and mass graves. Its slow, descending lines and muted brass evoke those brief pauses between bombardments when the guns fall silent, and you see what has been lost. “Deepest Dark” pushes further into combat memory with heavy percussion, low strings and harmonies that never quite resolve, ideally suited to the most desperate runs of The Perita Rebellion, when Recall missions send you back into the worst assaults and the sky is a constant barrage of Sentient fire. “Ironclad” channels the industrial might of the Old War, all marching rhythms, metallic hits, and bold brass that suggest colossal war machines and the relentless drive of Recall: Hunhullus and Dactolyst missions, where every wave of enemies is another turn of a war engine that believes itself unbreakable.

Other tracks focus on the human cost and the way history gets buried. “Executor” takes its name from the Orokin rank and feels tailored to the more chilling side of the Perita Rebellion – forced obedience, chains of command, and technologies like Ascaris Prime that let distant authorities hijack a Warframe’s will. Sharp rhythmic figures and sudden dynamic shifts make the music feel like a mind being overridden in an instant. “The Unremembered” plays like a theme for all the soldiers, children, and civilians who were meant to disappear from the record: its aching build mirrors the quest structure as you pick through censored histories, collect medals and tags in Perita, and piece together things both the Orokin and the Lotus would rather keep forgotten. “Decrypted” belongs to the more abstract side of the update – the Precipice, Descendia and the process of pulling secrets out of Roathe’s Infernums – with pulsing patterns and uneasy harmonies that feel like locked files being forced open and classified stories finally being read.

Finally, the score follows the update, out of the trenches and into its more spiritual and surreal spaces. “The Cardinal Calls” sits at the crossroads between Perita’s mud and the vaulted stone of La Cathédrale, the domain of the Devil’s Triad. Tolling motifs and choir-like textures make it feel like a summons from Lyon Allard himself, and it fits the moments when the Drifter leaves the din of artillery and steps onto the Precipice, hearing distant bells over a quiet battlefield. “Roses From The Abyss” is the album’s grand set-piece and Old Peace login theme, stretching the war-song language into something almost liturgical – a funeral march for Tau and for the Old Peace, where strings and voices rise like a requiem over burning trenches and fields of blood-red flowers. “His Light” is a more intimate meditation that sits between battlefield and belief: its gentle, hymn-like passages and sudden surges could be read as Sol’s distant radiance over Tau, or as the flickering faith of figures like Uriel and the Triad, wondering whether any light can really reach something as compromised as Roathe’s mind. Taken together, these pieces don’t just decorate the update – they mirror how The Old Peace plays, moving from Adis’s quiet lullaby to full-scale trench warfare, then into cathedrals, Infernums, and finally the decrypted truth about what really happened on Tau.

Credits
Music production & supervision: Matthew Chalmers, Erich Preston, Laura Dickens
Composer: Matthew Chalmers
Lyrics: Matthew Chalmers, Adrian Bott, Jessica Lucas, Francesca Hauser
Featured performances: Matthew Chalmers (vocals), Francesca Hauser (vocals), Anika Venkatesh (vocals), Chris Pruden (piano)
Album: Warframe: The Old Peace (Official Soundtrack)
Artist: Warframe
Label / Publisher: Digital Extremes Ltd.
Release date: December 10, 2025
℗ 2025 Digital Extremes Ltd. · © 2025 Digital Extremes Ltd.



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