
To clarify, not every player who wants to make that noise upon their timely demise will have to pay for it. … Except for the players, who'll need to pay 100 Robux (which is equivalent to about a $1) to license it. Now, they've settled the dispute, and everyone's a winner!

Rather than giving them some sort of cease and desist, he instead went into talks with Roblox. Oof.Īs reported by VentureBeat, the CEO of Intellivision, Tommy Tallarico only discovered last year that this "oof" was something he made. Now, the Roblox Corporation plan on charging for the noise. Turns out that specific "oof" belongs to a sound designer who originally created the noise for the noughties game Messiah.


The famous sound clip has hit headlines over the last few days because it managed to get caught up in a copyright dispute. I was today years old when I learned that the "oof" noise I hear in so many memes and videos is, in fact, the Roblox death noise.
