I’ve run into this kind of question a few times — multiple projects can share the name 'God Slayer', so the composer depends entirely on which version you’re referring to. Without a specific year, platform, or performer, it’s risky to name someone outright.
Quick route: find the official source (publisher, distributor, or the video page) and look for credits labeled 'music by' or 'composed by'. If that fails, use Shazam on the track, check the description of the video upload, or look at the product’s credits (end credits in film/episode, in-game credits for games). Bandcamp, Discogs, and Spotify/Apple Music often have composer metadata too.
If you tell me where you heard it — link, platform, or any line from the lyrics — I’ll track the composer down for you and share direct references. I enjoy tracing these things; it’s like following a trail of tiny easter eggs.
There’s a good chance I could find the composer once I know which 'God Slayer' you mean, because that title shows up in different places — a short film, an indie game, and a few songs all share similar names. I usually split the search into a few concrete steps: check the official release listing, scan streaming-platform metadata, and hunt down the credits in the product itself.
A couple of practical tricks I use: play the track while running an ID app like Shazam or SoundHound — sometimes the result points to an album page that lists composer credits. If it’s an anime or series, I open the end credits and pause during the music roll; the composer is usually credited as 'music by' and theme performers are clearly listed. For games, the in-game credits and the manual/Steam page often have composer names. If you found the theme on YouTube, inspect the uploader’s profile and video description — OST channels and official uploads frequently include full credits.
If you want, tell me where you heard the soundtrack (YouTube, Steam, a physical CD, etc.) and I’ll do the sleuthing. I love this sort of detective work—tracking down who wrote a theme is oddly satisfying and usually leads to discovering more music I enjoy.
I get why this question pops up — soundtrack credits can be maddeningly vague online. If you mean the soundtrack and theme songs for something called 'God Slayer', the tricky bit is that multiple projects across games, indie films, and music tracks use that title, so there isn't a single universal composer I can point to without more context.
When I hunt down credits I start with the easiest, nerdy tricks: check the official release page (the game or film’s website, the publisher’s press kit, or the album page on Bandcamp/Spotify) because those usually list 'music by' or 'composed by'. If it’s an anime or series, the end credits and the listing on sites like IMDb or the Japanese pages of the distributor often list the composer and performers for opening/ending themes. For songs uploaded to YouTube, the description sometimes names both composer and performer; for OST tracks on streaming platforms, click the track details.
If you can tell me which medium or a little context — a year, platform (PC, console, YouTube short), or an artist who performs the theme — I’ll dig through the credits and dig up the composer name fast. I’ve tracked down obscure OST credits before by cross-referencing Bandcamp, Discogs, and the composer’s social pages, so if you drop even a tiny clue I’ll take a crack at it.
2025-08-29 16:22:48
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What a neat question — it made me go hunting through my own messy anime watchlist! There isn’t a widely known anime that goes strictly by the English title 'God Slayer', which is why searches can come up empty or show different results depending on translations. Sometimes titles get mangled in fan translations or storefront listings, so the studio credit gets lost in the shuffle.
If you meant a show where gods are literally fought or killed, one common pick people refer to is 'Record of Ragnarok' (Japanese: 'Shuumatsu no Walküre'), which was produced by Graphinica for its anime adaptation. Another series people sometimes confuse with god-killing themes is 'The God of High School' — that one was animated by MAPPA. But if you have a screenshot, a manga author name, or even a character name, that would help me pin it down exactly. I often find the end credits or the Blu-ray booklet the fastest way to confirm studio info when streaming metadata is vague.
If you want, drop the exact phrase you saw or where you heard it (a forum, a subtitle, a game tie-in) and I’ll dig deeper. I love these little sleuthing missions — they’re the best excuse to go down rabbit holes on MyAnimeList, Anime News Network, and the credits pages.