Nier Automata 2B standing in forest movie video game adaptations
Image via Square Enix

Nier: Automata powered an artistic swimming performance at the Paris 2024 Olympics

A beautiful song, indeed.

Japan’s female artistic swimming team brought video games into the spotlight at the 2024 Olympics this past Tuesday by performing to the tune of Nier: Automata‘s OST.

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The Japanese team used “A Beautiful Song” as a part of their highly energetic freeform dance routine, and came just six points short of winning a medal.

The beautiful happening was noticed by Emi Evans, the singer who’d originally lent her vocals to the OST:

And the event didn’t go unnoticed by Yoko Taro, the creator of the Nier series himself, who responded by, well, making his face on Twitter.

This is not the first time that Nier: Automata makes an appearance at the Olympics. The opening ceremony of Tokyo’s 2020 Olympics also featured one of the game’s fantastic songs:

You can totally see that the generation currently competing at the Olympics has games in its DNA, as evidenced by Noah Lyle, the already legendary runner destroys the competition while keeping Yu-Gi-Oh! cards under his equipment.

Gymnast Casimir Schmidt also proudly displays tattoos of Mew and Toad on his huge arms.

This isn’t even the first time a video game’s OST shows up at the artistic swimming competition. The United States artistic swimming duo also made use of the brilliant “Fithos Lusec Wecos Vinosec” way back in the Athens 2004 Olympics, and ended up taking home the bronze medal.

Japan’s song choice makes me very happy, because I’ve been preaching that Nier: Automata‘s soundtrack is a transcendent selection of music ever since I got to play the game, but the truth is that we’re long past the time when video game OSTs were just fun curiosities. There are many games nowadays whose OSTs are composed of nothing but bangers, so I must ask: which game’s soundtrack would you like to see featured in the next Olympics artistic swimming competition?


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Image of Tiago Manuel
Tiago Manuel
Tiago is a freelancer who used to write about video games, cults, and video game cults. He now writes for Destructoid in an attempt to find himself on the winning side when the robot uprising comes.