
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 simply retains impressing. Along with promoting greater than 2 million copies already, Sandfall Interactive’s turn-based RPG is successful in relation to its music.
The developer shared on social media that Expedition 33’s soundtrack is “connecting far past what we ever imagined.” Particularly, the soundtrack has reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Classical Album charts, together with leaping to No. 13 on the Official Soundtrack chart and No. 31 on the Official Album obtain chart. In whole, Expedition 33’s soundtrack has surpassed 18 million streams since launch.
“Wow,” the developer mentioned in a social media publish.
Our soundtrack is connecting far past what we ever imagined:
#1 on Billboard’s Classical Album Chart & Classical Crossover Album Chart
#13 on the Official Soundtrack Album Chart
#31 on the Official Album Obtain Chart
Over 18 million streams since launch. Wow. pic.twitter.com/kCgV4rWYqA— Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 (@expedition33) May 7, 2025
Expedition 33’s soundtrack has additionally impressed quite a few fan covers, which Sandfall has re-shared throughout its social media channels. Considered one of them is the spectacular guitar cowl under.
Expedition 33’s composer, Lorien Testard, had by no means labored on a recreation earlier than. Sport director Guillaume Broche found Testard on the website Soundcloud, and the remaining is historical past.
Expedition 33 launched the identical week as Oblivion Remastered, and a few believed the Bethesda remaster would possibly eat Expedition 33’s lunch, however that did not appear to have occurred. Writer Kepler Interactive mentioned the proximity to Oblivion Remastered did not negatively influence Expedition 33, and might need even helped. Expedition 33 and Oblivion Remastered are each accessible on Sport Cross.
GameSpot’s Expedition 33 evaluate scored the sport a 9/10. “There are minor pitfalls in relation to its slim exploration and a few quality-of-life points, however these missteps aren’t sufficient to considerably detract from a recreation with all of the makings of an RPG basic,” reviewer Richard Wakeling mentioned.
