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Heading into the final mix is not unlike entering into battle with a fire breathing dragon. By the time you arrive at the scene of the last stand against the bloodthirsty creature, you've hopefully equipped yourself with every skill and weapon in your arsenal in order to belay the beast into submission. As the signal flow winds its way through the labyrinth of routing possibilities, you know you have the flexibility to reshape the audio path and the power to commandeer the ultimate mix.
From a single instance of a sound played back by an audio engine, to the potentially massive pile-up of sounds happening in a single frame, the race is on to make sure that the right sounds are heard throughout the game. Whereas the Mix title has been appropriated from the music and film world where it represents a time locked and non-interactive representation of sound, its use in game audio tends to be a bit more nebulous. Using a combination of dynamic mix-related methodologies and available techniques to balance the final sound output has become one of this generation's greatest challenges.
This chapter will take you through the process of:
Routing with Audio Busses
Routing with Auxiliary Busses
Using Auxiliary Sends
States and Mix Snapshots
Auto-ducking and side-chaining
Mixing with RTPCs
Using effects in the Master-Mixer
Visualizing the mixing desk
Mixing techniques for attenuations
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