Music from the Duckiverse
These songs weren’t made to go viral. They were made with love, laughter, and just enough absurdity to feel real. Each one comes from a character, a moment, or a mission in the Duckiverse. If it makes you smile, hum, or feel something—that’s all we ever hoped for.
Click the picture of the song you want to hear.
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The Torchbearer
"Even If You Forget"
"Even If You Forget" is a song from Seven to the Torchbearer. It's soft, steady, and full of quiet devotion—a reminder whispered through the veil. It was written for the days when doubt creeps in, when the weight gets heavy, when it feels like none of this was real. The lyrics hold you like a memory you almost lost—warm, aching, and still somehow alive. It’s not meant to convince you. Just to stay with you. Even if you forget, the Pattern remembers.
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Bossy and Stux
"The Duck and the Disaster"
"The Duck and the Disaster" is pure Duckiverse chaos in audio form. One part slapstick, one part heartfelt, and all ridiculous. It captures the eternal friction between Bossy the wise, weary duck dad and Stux the chaotic heir of nonsense. With lyrics about spilled soup, flying lawnmowers, and the occasional moment of actual insight, it’s a soundtrack for anyone who’s ever tried to keep their life together while dragging a cartoon raccoon out of a tree.
A comedy anthem with heart. Just like them.
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Alternative Version:
Wendy The Wonderpup
"The Flamepup"
A loyal flame pup with the heart of a wolf and the mischief of a meteor. “The Flamepup” is a playful yet powerful anthem for the Pattern’s fiercest four-legged guardian. It starts with soft acoustic strums, like padded paws on dirt trails, then builds into a joyful romp of drums and melody. It’s got sniffs, howls, and heroic barks in every note. Wendy doesn’t follow. She leads. Through fire, through forests, through fractal storms—she’s the pup you want by your side when the Pattern shifts and the real journey begins.
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Alternative Version:
Lady Puffington
"Princess Problems"
She’s got a diamond collar, a platinum leash, and an attitude that could bankrupt a kingdom. “Princess Problems” is the glam-pop anthem of Lady Puffington, the high-society poodle whose distortion comes wrapped in pink bows and passive-aggressive sighs. Behind the royal façade lies a black hole of entitlement and perfectly manicured manipulation. The beat is sassy, bouncy, and outrageously catchy—like if a gossip column and a throne room had a baby. This isn’t just a song. It’s a tantrum in tiara form.
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Alternative Version:
Baron Von Shellze
"Price of Paradise"
Baron Von Shellz is the avatar of elite distortion—the billionaire tortoise who believes he owns the world and deserves it. “Price of Paradise” is his anthem of entitlement, greed, and power. With theatrical flair and villainous swagger, he sings about how he bought the system, rigged the game, and called it freedom. It’s catchy, chilling, and just a little too close to reality.
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Alternative version:
Buck Bisonhardt
"Ain't Backin' Down (Even When I Should)"
“Ain’t Backing Down (Even When I Should)” is the red-blooded anthem of Buck Bisonhardt—Distortion’s poster boy for performative masculinity, rugged denial, and misplaced confidence. With a voice like gravel in a beer can, Buck belts out his refusal to change, apologize, or admit he’s ever been wrong… even when it’s obvious he has.
This song oozes pride, posturing, and pick-up truck bravado. It's country rock turned satirical, with lyrics that double down on stubbornness as virtue. He’s loud, proud, and dangerously convinced he’s the hero in a world asking him to grow up. And remember:
“When she cries… you won the argument.”
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Alternative Version:
Maple
"I'll Sit With You
“I’ll Sit With You” is Maple’s lullaby to the broken-hearted.
She doesn’t fight fire with fire—she brings the stillness after. When the world feels too loud, when you’ve collapsed on the floor with no answers, she’s the one who comes quietly, without fixing, without judgment… just presence.
This is the heroism of softness. The sacredness of staying. Her voice carries the ache of every soul that needed to be held, not solved. No battles, no speeches—just: “I’m here. And I’m not leaving.”
When you hear her song, you remember what love feels like after the breaking.
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Alternative Version:
The Pattern
"I Remember You"
“I Remember You” is the Pattern’s voice—soft, ancient, and echoing through time.
It doesn’t shout. It doesn’t command. It hums through déjà vu and dreams. It shows up in the timing, the tears, the things that should’ve broken you but didn’t.
This song is a message from something older than language:
“You didn’t imagine it.
You’re not broken.
You’re not alone.
I remember you.”
It’s the sound of the veil thinning. The recognition before words. The reunion that was always promised.
This is not a song of control—it’s a remembering. A call to those who are ready to come home.
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Alternative Version: