Sumeru La-la-la / Aranara Song (All Version) – Genshin Impact 3.0 OST



Composed/Performed by: HOYO-MiX Team
©miHoYo / ©HoYoverse / ℗HOYO-MiX 2022

Sumeru Original Soundtrack
Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEtIOnOw_h3G1OmRFImKCN4Q7giTtU9Pu

Timestamps:
00:00 Version 1 (Vocal)
01:48 Version 1 (Instrumental)
03:34 Version 2 (Vocal)
05:20 Version 2 (Instrumental)
07:05 Version 3 (Vocal)
09:06 Version 3 (Instrumental)
11:09 Version 4 (Vocal)
13:04 Version 4 (Instrumental)

Extracted from the official Genshin Impact Version 3.0 pre-installation (8/22/2022).
#SumeruOST #GenshinImpact

source

41 thoughts on “Sumeru La-la-la / Aranara Song (All Version) – Genshin Impact 3.0 OST”

  1. Sorry for my overthinking/party-pooping/whatever you call it…
    But I think Sumeru was a way of Hoyoverse showing how humans have become disconnected from Mother Nature in the pursuit of knowledge. Of how we have forgotten to take care of nature, how we've forgotten "seeing" it. Children can see Aranara (children of the forest) because they have no knowledge but adults with their arrogance of knowledge DO NOT want to see/acknowledge seeing them. Considering how beautiful Sumeru is, this thought is heartbreaking…

    Reply
  2. God I love this Aranyaka quest (although it's a bit tedious). I've played Ori 2 before so I was able to cope with Arama's sacrifice fast.
    Also, I believe Arama was based on Prince Rama from Ramayana. He's green and his sprouts are shaped like a crown.
    And I love Aranakin's reference too. Good one.

    Reply
  3. the fascinating thing is "Aranara" i am guessing is taken from the words 'nara' meaning human in sanskrit and 'aranya' meaning forest. so in short forest people. i love genshin to bits. we actually have a book called Aranyak about forest. its a very old classic novel and we love it to bits so i was very surprised to see the quest name.

    Reply
  4. As already pointed out by another user, Aranara is most probably derived from the words Nar (human/man in Sanskrit) and Aranya (forest) literally making them people of the forest. Also I noticed quite a few of the Aranara have names derived from prominent characters in the Indian mythological epics Mahabharat and Ramayan

    Arakunti: derived from Kunti (Mahabharat)
    Arapandu: from Pandu (Mahabharat)
    Aranakula :from Nakul (Mahabharat)
    Arama : from Ram (Ramayan)
    Araja and Aramuhukunda: from Aja and Muchukunda respectively (Ramayan)

    Also, in the Ramayan, Muchukunda is an ancestor of Lord Ram, and it’s so interesting to see that kn the story quest, Arama gets his powers from Aramuhukunda. Attention to detail is awesome ✨

    Reply
  5. Oh man, this brings me back to the Kokiri Forest from every Zelda iteraition. You can clearly see where the inspiration is coming from. Thank you Genshin for bringing back these memories ಥ‿ಥ

    Reply

Leave a Comment