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Culture & Community

Chiptune

Music from game hardware

The music genre and culture built around creating new music using vintage game hardware sound chips, particularly the Game Boy with LSDJ tracker software.

cross-platform musicsoundgame-boyculturedemoscene 1990–present

Overview

Chiptune is music created using the sound chips from vintage gaming hardware. What began as necessity—making music with limited hardware—evolved into a deliberate artistic choice. The Game Boy became the genre’s flagship instrument, with LSDJ tracker software enabling live performance.

Fast Facts

  • Origins: 1980s game music
  • Deliberate movement: 1990s+
  • Key platform: Game Boy + LSDJ
  • Scene: Global, active
  • Influence: Electronic music broadly

The Sound Chips

PlatformChip/SoundCharacter
Game Boy4 channelsClean, portable
C64 SID3 channelsGritty, warm
NES5 channelsBright, punchy
Spectrum AY3 channelsSharp

Game Boy and LSDJ

AspectDetail
SoftwareLSDJ (Little Sound DJ)
FeaturesFull tracker on Game Boy
PerformanceLive shows possible
CommunityMassive, active

Why Use Old Hardware?

ReasonExplanation
AestheticDistinctive lo-fi sound
ConstraintsLimitations breed creativity
PerformancePhysical, visual element
CommunityShared culture and tools

Live Performance

Chiptune artists perform live:

  • Gameboys linked for visuals
  • Tracker software operated in real-time
  • Visual aesthetic of gaming hardware on stage
  • Audience familiarity with sounds

Legacy

Chiptune demonstrates that constraints create aesthetic identity. What was necessity became artistic choice, and the sounds of 1980s gaming now appear across contemporary electronic music.

See Also