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Being a mix between the funky beats of Friday Night Funkin' and the talents songs from hololive, it should be no surprise the resulting songs are absolute bangers.

For the songs that the remixes originate from, see the Awesome Music page for hololive.

Spoilers Unmarked

Calliope Mori
  • "Live Again" is not only a remix of Calli's outro song of the same name, it's also a remix of SiIvaGunner's rip of Persona 3's "Joy", just remixed in the style of FNF.

Botan Shishiro

  • While Botan's songs throughout her week were originally just covers/remixes of Pico's own, that doesn't mean the songs in question aren't worthy of praise. Case in point, "Poi". Not only a cover of "Blammed" that features Botan's vocals, it's also a heavy dub-step remix with a far heavier beat drop from the original.

Coco Kiryu

  • "Gangmari Dragon." Take the original opening BGM for Coco's streams, add in the beep-boop vocals alongside Coco's spliced voice clips, and you get a song that fits right into the FNF format with its chaotic and catchy nature.
  • Closing off the week is "Hands" from Yakuza 6, an upbeat yet emotional song to signify a Grand Finale for Kiryu Coco. Fittingly, as the original song is considered a farewell to Kiryu Kazuma in its origin, so too is it a farewell to Coco both In-Universe and out.

Haachama/Akai Haato

  • "Haachama," Akai Haato's song of Week 2, starts off sounding like a straight rip of her original song "Red Heart" before Letting the Air out of the Band and transitioning into a horror-themed remix of "Haachama Cooking". Haato's shrill vocals and melody make for a catchy yet tense piece, with the tension and tempo gradually rising as the song goes on before ending on a haunting piano cover of the aforementioned "Red Heart."
  • Whereas Haachama's previous song was a slow paced and tense remix of "Haachama Cooking", "Red and Black" is a completely original song with a jazzy swing mood to lighten up the situation of Haachama trapping Aloe/Fubuki and Nene/Mio in her dimension with the intent to cook and eat them, in addition to ending the week with a bang.

Nekomata Okayu

  • While Okayu's "feisty side" making her sprout demonic horns and splitting her tail may come a bit outta nowhere, one has to admit: "Sinner" is an absolute bop. It perfectly encapsulates Okayu's flirty nature with some extremely catchy and seductive swing vibes.

Inugami Korone

  • "D.O.O.G.," the final song of Week 6, springboards off of a starting motif of Doom's main theme into a hardcore rock track rivalling even "Killer Scream", especially when Aloe/Fubuki pulls out a guitar mid-song to jam out with Korone providing some powerful backing vocals. It simultaneously makes zero sense and fits perfectly for its insane scenario and couldn't have been a better ending for the 6.0.0 update.

Freeplay Extras

  • "Leave It All To Me," AKA the iCarly theme song. It's a simple, short yet sweet bop that follows the same beat and instrumental as the actual tutorial song; turning into a jazzy remix that would make Nene proud.
  • Rushia's titular song "Killer Scream" is an epic metal song that goes hard and fast shortly after the deceptively calming and serene piano melody that starts it off. Matching with Rushia's calming appearance at a glance but loud and abrasive voice she gives out at times, her soft vocals complement the otherwise hectic and heavy beat but also contrast her infamous screams peppered throughout at multiple intervals.

Other Songs/Music

  • The version five update for HoloFunk features its own tutorial song, "Nene's Funkin Lesson". It follows the same calm beat of the FNF version, until the melody comes in to turn it into one jazzy piece. It's also peppered by Nene chiming in with her Gratuitous English voice clips, from an encouraging "Yeah!" to ending off with an exclamatory "Perfect!"
  • The menu BGM for both versions are some jazzy tunes:
    • For the Aloe Side we get "Diva," a fast-tempo remix of Persona 5's title music, mashed up with the recurring riff of Aloe's Loading BGM.
    • For the Fubuki Side we get "Everlasting Investigation," a piece with instrumentation that wouldn't be out of place in an upbeat detective show... if it weren't for the Fubuki's voice clips in the background that adds the quirky feel to it, including her imitation of the "Go man, go!" vocals and her singing the melody from the "Im.Scatman" video.

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