Your Gloria round has inspired me.
Also Fusion is probably one of the best PMVs of all time.
Moderator: andyp

Your Gloria round has inspired me.

Yep, that's exactly what I was talking about. Just the beats with no other sound from the music/audio.fragrantEmulsion wrote: Tue Dec 17, 2019 4:08 pmWhat exactly do you need? I can probably make a .wav of all the beat files.BoundSquirrel wrote: Tue Dec 17, 2019 7:22 am Any chance of a beat track for this?![]()
Thanks in advance!

Irene Rouse.LucySD wrote: Fri Jan 03, 2020 8:56 am what's the name of the green-eyed beauty that closes out Round 6 ?



Well, I'm going to do an eStim for this video-softcore is right up my alley so I'm motivated to do so for selfish reasons. Ill take them piece by piece if that's the only way to get them. PM me your two rounds-if others that contributed want to do the same, I can stitch the files together and adjust timing accordingly. Getting everything in beat track format pushes this much higher in my queue than having to sort through the full audio.Caius Prepus wrote: Sat May 23, 2020 3:41 pm IF somebody have it, it would be fragrantemulsion, I would like him to answer to this. I could dig my beatrack out, but that is just 2 rounds of the whole CH.


If I understand correctly, the e-stim audio wave (.WAV, .MP3, ...) is fed into a transformer to create electric pulses in the end. It's not quite like an on/off switch. It's like quickly playing with a light dimmer to flash the light. So, the file is easier to create if there is no noise, i.e. the actual music not in the audio file.fragrantEmulsion wrote: Sun May 24, 2020 3:15 am How does it work? Do you each have a specific frequency range that feels good? Does the beat track simply exist as a binary yes/no that is interpreted by the device?

Oh man, I wish that was the case! No, making stim files for these is WAY more manual than that. The beat tracks are just the tracks with only the stroke beats in them. The cleaner the beat the better. From there, I add a second stereo track in Audacity and match up, beat for beat, with a stim beat. Those all came from digitalparkinglot's Stacy vs Sybil. I renamed each of those files based on how long the beat is and then pick the right length and offset for the stim track. So, if the beat in a CH file is a 1-1-1-1 beat at 0.5 second intervals (a pretty normal beat), I find a 0.5 second (or slightly shorter) beat, insert it into audacity for each beat of the track. When the fast beats come in, I find one that's shorter and use that. Then I grab about 5 or 10 of those and copy/paste for as long as that beat is going... And then find out that what I thought was 0.5 seconds was actually 0.53 seconds so 20 beats later, everything is off and I have to go back and adjust. Then find out it's actually 0.52, so 30 beats later it's off so I have to take out fractions of seconds to get everything to line up.doremi wrote: Sun May 24, 2020 5:46 amIf I understand correctly, the e-stim audio wave (.WAV, .MP3, ...) is fed into a transformer to create electric pulses in the end. It's not quite like an on/off switch. It's like quickly playing with a light dimmer to flash the light. So, the file is easier to create if there is no noise, i.e. the actual music not in the audio file.fragrantEmulsion wrote: Sun May 24, 2020 3:15 am How does it work? Do you each have a specific frequency range that feels good? Does the beat track simply exist as a binary yes/no that is interpreted by the device?




Softcore Caillaboration™Caius Prepus wrote: Fri Jun 12, 2020 5:04 pm
(probably call it something like : Softcore Collaboration Reborn - Caius Prepus Edit)