Choose a clean, steady track
Start with a track that has a strong downbeat, stable tempo, and little intro silence.
Unofficial RoboBeat fan guide
A practical guide for custom music, file formats, BPM sync, cassette notes, and safe sharing.
RoboBeat custom songs matter because players arrive with a concrete task: import music, fix sync, and make a run feel playable.
A safe guide focuses on MP3, WAV, OGG, cassette metadata, trim points, BPM checks, and music rights. No copyrighted audio uploads are needed.
Start with a track that has a strong downbeat, stable tempo, and little intro silence.
Use MP3, WAV, or OGG where supported and only use music you own or have permission to use.
Use the BPM tool as a first pass, then listen for whether shots feel late or early.
Long quiet intros make the run feel broken even when the BPM is close.
Save title, artist, BPM, difficulty, first downbeat, platform tested, and sync notes.
Short answers for searchers and support questions.
Use the in-game custom music workflow on supported PC platforms, then document BPM, trim point, difficulty, and sync notes.
RoboBeat is a rhythm FPS roguelite built around shooting, moving, and surviving in sync with music.
Use the PC custom music workflow where supported, and check platform notes before assuming console import support.
Player guides should plan around MP3, WAV, and OGG files, then verify current official notes before publishing changes.
Console players should not expect the same PC-style custom song import workflow unless official platform notes change.
111-145 BPM is a practical comfort range for new players before pushing into 146-185 BPM or 186-240 BPM challenge runs.
No. RoboBeat.org is an independent fan-made resource and links back to official stores, official pages, and community references.