Ideal Father Friend Dlc Rj01213396 Extra Quality -

To understand the hype, we must first dissect the core tags.

If you are considering purchasing the Ideal Father Friend DLC RJ01213396 Extra Quality, here is what the listening experience actually looks like:

Track 1 (Base Work Re-remastered): The opening is a door closing. Footsteps approach. The "Father Friend" asks about your day, but unlike a parent, he doesn't interrupt. He lets you imagine your response in the silence. The "Extra Quality" here reveals the subtle room tone—slightly damp, suggesting a cozy den or study. ideal father friend dlc rj01213396 extra quality

Track 2 (The DLC Introduction): This is where the "Friend" takes over. There is a distinct sound of two drinks being placed on a table (one for you, one for him). The clink of glass is crisp. He says, "We don't have to talk. Let's just exist for a minute." This is the core thesis of the work.

Track 3 (The Resolution): The final 15 minutes are the hardest to listen to without crying. He gives a speech about "found family." Because you have the Extra Quality version, you hear the slight waver in his voice—the actor's real emotional commitment. You don't just hear the words; you hear the vulnerability. To understand the hype, we must first dissect the core tags

1. The Foley Work is Insane You don’t buy a “father friend” DLC for action scenes. You buy it for the presence. In the base game, the sound of pouring coffee was nice. In this Extra Quality version, you can hear the ceramic mug’s temperature. You hear the hesitation before the dad joke. The clink of a watch against a wooden desk during a hug? Absolute ASMR gold.

2. The “Ideal” Dynamic The DLC leans harder into the "friend" aspect. In Scenario B, you’re stuck inside during a typhoon. Instead of forced emotional drama, you just... build a plastic model of a Zero fighter together. The dialogue is improvised-sounding. He asks you about your hobbies. He doesn’t solve your problems; he just listens while flipping through a magazine. That is the Ideal father figure: one who doesn't lecture. The "Father Friend" asks about your day, but

3. The Emotional Gut Punch (Scenario C) Late Night Advice is dangerous. Do not listen to this on public transport. The DLC adds a 15-minute track where you admit you failed an exam / lost a job / messed up a relationship. The "father friend" doesn't get angry. He goes quiet for 8 seconds (you count them). Then he says, "Yeah. That sucks. Let's get ramen."

That pause? That raw, unscripted-feeling breathing? That’s the "Extra Quality" right there.

In lower quality versions, the father's voice remains at a constant volume. In Extra Quality, the compression is removed.