How to make you very own sound files It is quite simple, really, but I have already had people ask me how it is done. First, the Baldur's Gate game itself actively supports custom wave files, and everytime it starts will check the baldur's gate\sounds directory. Within that directory, you will find a text file [sndlst.txt] from the design team, explaining what each of the sounds means (rare select is actually what happens if you continuosly click on your character, kind of like in Warcraft II). I recommend you open that text file and keep it handy while you record your sounds, makes it much easier to remember what sound you should be working on next and what it should be named. Technical stuff. Some people plug their mic into the back of their sound card and it just doesn't work. Me too, first time. Windows usually mutes the microphone for some reason, so double click on the volume control down on the task bar, and make sure it's not muted. Next, go up to Options\Properties. On the next box click the Recording option, then OK. Now make sure that the Microphone is selected as the "input device," this time you would make sure it's checked. Set the levels here, then minimize or close it. Next, find a wave recording program. Windows comes with something called "Sound Recorder," which should be in the Entertainment folder. If you can't find it, perhaps you didn't install it when you first installed windows, in which case you should check by going to Settings\Control Panel\Add Remove Programs. Click the Windows Setup tap and then scroll down to Multimedia and double click. See if Sound Recorder is checked. If you have a Sound Blaster, try using Wave Studio. Had a few comments, seems when some people recorded their sounds, they ended up with low decible ranges. Best advice here is to crank it, baby, under an options setting. In Wave Studio I usually, not always, amplified volume %200. Also try a little reverb (echo) helps smooth things out nicely, just don't get carried away... perhaps %19 100 msec. If you're serious about this, do what I did and pick up an "electret condensor" microphone. $30 or so. This looks like your standard cheapo mic, but has a slot for a battery in there. Get MUCH better quality with it in the ol' Soundcard mic input. Or--buy a REAL good microphone, and try using a guitar amp or stereo patched into your line input. YOU DO THIS AT YOUR OWN RISK! I mean... make sure you take it from LINE OUT on the stereo to LINE IN on the soundcard. DON'T use a SPEAKER output into the LINE IN, cranking 75 watts of juice through your poor soundcard. Things will smoke. So I say here I ain't liable if you do something dumb. Remember to save your WAVs as 22 khz 16 bit mono! Good Luck! KJ roop@netnitco.net