Eric | Orchestorm

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Eric | Orchestorm

Eric | Orchestorm

@Orchestorm

Composer. @Starship_Sim, @UnderspaceRPG, @CratelStudios, Prodigy Films & more! Always happy to discuss your vision & the music to complete the picture

cursed with a blue tick Katılım Temmuz 2015
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
@melissamedinavo This is good SO good that it might make me the first person to be able to say: “I made it in my career and it’s ‘cause I paid for some person’s online course” Masterclass masterclasses have SUCH a high success rate, right?? Bravo to you for this monumental milestone!
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Melissa Medína 🔜 VO Atlanta
Introducing my new class: Masterclass Masterclass. A Masterclass on building a Masterclass about building Masterclasses. By the end you’ll be ready to launch your own Masterclass Masterclass Masterclass. Enroll now! ✨😏
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
I miss when humans wrote their own posts
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
FULL SLOP: The self-help books helped… but the real change came from one uncomfortable decision For most of my 20s I had a social habit that quietly messed with a lot of areas of my life: I avoided people. Not in a dramatic “I never left my house” kind of way. I had friends, I worked, I functioned. But any time there was a moment where I could talk to someone new, make a joke, ask a question, or just start a conversation… I defaulted to silence. Elevators. Break rooms. Lines at coffee shops. Parties where I only knew one person. My brain always ran the same script: Don’t say anything weird. Don’t bother them. Don’t make it awkward. So I’d just… say nothing. After a while I started noticing something uncomfortable: people who were no smarter, no more interesting, and honestly sometimes way more awkward than me seemed to glide through life socially. They met people easily. They got opportunities. They built friendships everywhere. Meanwhile I was the “nice quiet guy.” So I did what a lot of Redditors probably do when they realize they have a social problem: I started reading self-help books. The first one was How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie. It was great. Seriously. I learned things like remembering people’s names, asking questions, and showing genuine interest. Then I read The Charisma Myth by Olivia Fox Cabane. That one helped me understand presence and body language. Then came Models: Attract Women Through Honesty by Mark Manson, which surprisingly had a lot of good advice about authenticity and confidence. And honestly… they worked. A little. I understood social dynamics better. I had frameworks. I had techniques. But my behavior didn’t actually change that much. Because the real problem wasn’t that I didn’t know what to do. The real problem was that I was still avoiding the moment of risk. All the books in the world can’t replace the moment where you decide: “Alright. I’m going to say something.” The turning point came from something stupidly small. I was in line at a coffee shop and the guy in front of me was wearing a shirt from a game I loved. Normally I would have noticed it, thought “that’s cool,” and stayed silent. But this time I forced myself to say: “Hey, great shirt. That game is amazing.” That was it. A ten second interaction. But the crazy part? He lit up. We talked for a minute. Turned out we liked a lot of the same stuff. Nothing life-changing happened… but I walked out realizing something huge. People actually like being talked to. So I started doing something uncomfortable: treating everyday life like practice. Compliment the barista. Make a joke in the elevator. Ask a coworker how their weekend was and actually listen. At first it felt forced and awkward. But after a few months something weird happened. I stopped thinking about it. Conversations started happening naturally. I made new friends. Work got easier. Networking stopped feeling like some scary corporate ritual and started feeling like… just talking to humans. Looking back, the books were helpful. They gave me the map. But the thing that changed my life wasn’t another chapter or another framework. It was realizing that confidence isn’t something you learn first and then act on. Confidence is what shows up after you survive a bunch of tiny awkward moments and realize the world didn’t end. If anyone reading this feels stuck socially, here’s the simple thing that helped me the most: Don’t try to become a charismatic person overnight. Just say one small thing you normally wouldn’t say. That’s the whole game.
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
Fed ChatGPT the prompt I imagined most people on Reddit use to make their inspirational karma farming slop and this is how it responded:
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Desertanu
Desertanu@Desertanu·
I still can't believe it's real, but I'm thrilled to announce that I'll be coming to GDC this year! This will be my first time in attendance, so I'm excited to see what it's all about.
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Eric | Orchestorm retweetledi
Starship Simulator
Starship Simulator@Starship_Sim·
A short video of the first iteration of science surface probes leaving the ship to gather items of interest. These are then brought back to the probe room to be taken to their relevant science labs via quarantine. Plus Gene because he likes to get involved... youtube.com/watch?v=ImbW2j…
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Eduard
Eduard@edthesoundman·
What is the most brutally honest thing someone could say about your music?
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
What keeps me coming to this app instead of Threads is how many people there misuse the word “officially”
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
Algorithmic social media frustrates me sometimes One of my favorite aspects of composing is writing lengthy intros that tease the main melody and musical ideas that only make so much sense once you hear the leading sections of the composition There’s no room for that now
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
Accidentally left Planet Coaster 2 on for 15 hours When we came back we had no notifications, and our attendance and net worth tripled
Eric | Orchestorm tweet mediaEric | Orchestorm tweet media
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Eric | Orchestorm
Eric | Orchestorm@Orchestorm·
@jgmusic “29 live musicians in a stone church” It’s a good thing reverb control isn’t important /s
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Jason Graves
Jason Graves@jgmusic·
At last, I can sound like a real composer. So much time wasted studying orchestration and harmony. All I needed was this small 29 piece sampled orchestra.
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