Fall Guys Meme Soundboard: Best Eliminated Sounds

The ultimate fall guys meme soundboard guide — Eliminated sting, Qualified chime, crown victory, slime splat, and 5 more original recreations for Discord and stream.

Fall Guys Meme Soundboard: Best Eliminated Sounds

The second that descending defeat sting plays over your falling bean, something clicks. It is too cheerful to be cruel and too perfectly timed to be accidental. Fall Guys built one of the most meme-ready audio libraries in modern party gaming, and the community noticed immediately. This guide covers eight essential Fall Guys meme sounds worth recreating for your soundboard, explains why each one works as a Discord or stream reaction, and walks through the setup from clip to hotkey.


TL;DR

  • Fall Guys has eight iconic sounds that work as standalone meme reactions: Eliminated sting, Qualified chime, crown victory music, slime splat, Hex-A-Gone reveal, bean kid “yay,” falling wahhh, and Tail Tag scramble music.
  • All clips covered here are original recreations — not ripped game audio — so streaming rights are clean.
  • Clips should be 1.5–3 seconds. Shorter kills the emotion; longer kills the pacing.
  • Global hotkeys in VoxBooster fire from fullscreen party games with no alt-tab required.
  • EAC-compatible for titles running Epic’s Easy Anti-Cheat.

Why Fall Guys Audio Works So Well as Meme Reactions

Fall Guys was designed by Mediatonic (now part of Epic Games) as a battle-royale party game with a television game-show aesthetic. Every visual and audio element was tuned to the chaotic-but-cheerful tone of a Saturday morning game show where nobody gets hurt and failure is immediately funny.

That design intent created an accidental meme library. The audio cues are:

  • Short. Most stings are under three seconds.
  • Emotionally unambiguous. You know exactly what “Eliminated” feels like without any context.
  • Tonally absurd. A defeat sound should feel sad. The Fall Guys version sounds almost congratulatory, which creates the comedic gap that makes it spread.
  • Universally recognized. After years of streams, clips, and social posts, anyone who has gamed in the past five years recognizes these sounds in isolation.

That combination is exactly what a good soundboard reaction needs: instant recognition, shared emotional context, and enough tonal irony to work across situations.


The 8 Essential Fall Guys Meme Sounds

1. The Eliminated Defeat Sting

The crown jewel of the Fall Guys audio library. A short descending phrase, major key but with a drooping final note, that plays the instant your bean is eliminated. It lasts roughly two seconds and carries a full emotional arc: brief hope, then the floor drops out.

Soundboard use: React to any failure — yours, a teammate’s, or a perfectly timed bait. Works in game lobbies, Discord calls, and as an OBS alert sound for when a stream goes sideways. The timing is everything; drop it the instant someone says something overconfident.

Recreating it: The sting is built from a synth brass hit followed by a bell-like descending run. A basic synth (any free plugin like VITAL or Surge XT) can approximate this with a bright brass patch. Pitch the root note to a D4, drop to A3, land on F#3. Add a short reverb tail. Target length: 2.0–2.2 seconds.


2. The Qualified Celebration Chime

The counterpart to Eliminated — a bright, rising arpeggio that plays when you advance to the next round. Three ascending notes, then a triumphant landing note. Less meme-famous than Eliminated but genuinely useful as a reaction.

Soundboard use: Drop it when something goes unexpectedly right. A clutch play, a successful speed run, someone finally figuring out a mechanic after ten attempts. The contrast with dropping Eliminated in the same session creates natural comedic structure for streams.

Recreating it: A glockenspiel or marimba-like patch works well here. Notes: C4 → E4 → G4 → C5, with the final note slightly sustained. Total length around 1.8 seconds. Light reverb, no distortion — the sound is supposed to feel clean and celebratory.


3. Crown Victory Music

The full victory fanfare when you win a show is too long for a soundboard (around eight seconds). The useful portion is the first two to three seconds: the initial brass hit and the first rising phrase before the full melody develops. That fragment carries the same “I won” energy without overstaying.

Soundboard use: Any actual win moment. Finishing a tough puzzle, winning an argument, someone on the team finally pulling their weight. The longer nature (compared to Eliminated) means you use it sparingly — reserved for genuine victory moments rather than ironic ones.

Recreating it: Brass ensemble patch, root note F4, rising figure up to C5. Optional: add a tambourine hit on beat one for the game-show feel. Keep the usable clip to 2.5 seconds maximum.


4. Slime Fall Splat

The wet, rubbery splat sound that plays when your bean hits slime during a level fall. Not a music sting — a pure sound effect. Short, physical, almost comedic in isolation.

Soundboard use: React to something that lands badly. A joke that doesn’t hit. A take that is obviously wrong. A terrible play. The slime splat has the right combination of impact and absurdity to work as a non-verbal “oof” without being hostile.

Recreating it: A layered noise burst — low-frequency thud (200–300 Hz) combined with a wet click transient and a short downward pitch sweep. In Audacity: white noise burst shaped with a fast attack, medium decay; layer with a low sine wave at 220 Hz, pitch swept from 220 Hz to 80 Hz over 150ms. Target: 0.8–1.2 seconds.


5. Hex-A-Gone Reveal Music

Hex-A-Gone is one of the most memorable Fall Guys final rounds — a multi-layer hexagonal platform that collapses tile by tile. The reveal music that plays when this round is announced is a short dramatic sting: building strings or synth pad, resolved with a single strong brass hit.

Soundboard use: Drop it as a “dramatic reveal” reaction. Someone shares big news, a shocking play is made, a plot twist happens in a stream game. The reveal sting signals “this moment matters” with enough irony that it reads as comedic rather than sincere.

Recreating it: A string swell from a low tonic (C3) up to the fifth (G3) over 1.5 seconds, resolved by a single brass hit on the octave (C4). A simple DAW automation curve handles the swell. Total length: 2.0–2.5 seconds.


6. Bean Kid “Yay” Celebration

The short vocal exclamation your bean character makes when celebrating — a quick, high-pitched “yay” or cheerful chirp, often accompanied by a simple jump animation. The vocalization is cartoonishly simple and endearing.

Soundboard use: Any genuine small win. Solved the puzzle, remembered the route, someone finally joins the voice call. The “yay” is small-scale enough that it reads as sincere rather than sarcastic, which makes it a versatile positive reaction that does not feel as loaded as the Qualified chime.

Recreating it: A human vocal “yay” pitched up by +5 to +8 semitones. Record yourself saying “yay” enthusiastically, load into a pitch-shifting plugin (or Audacity’s Effects → Pitch), shift upward, add minimal reverb. Length: 0.6–0.8 seconds.


7. Falling Into Goo “Wahhh”

The exaggerated falling cry — a descending “wahhh” vocalization that plays as your bean tumbles into a goo pit or off the map. The pitch drops in real time with the fall, creating a natural Doppler-effect joke.

Soundboard use: The pitch drop makes this uniquely useful for reactions involving decline or descent. A conversation topic that goes downhill. A comeback attempt that fails. Someone’s mood visibly dropping live on stream. The descending pitch is the joke — it needs no setup.

Recreating it: Record a “wahhh” vocalization and apply an automated pitch envelope — start at +3 semitones, automate down to -8 semitones over 1.2 seconds. The speed of the pitch drop controls the comedic timing. Faster drops feel more physical; slower drops feel more theatrical.


8. Tail Tag Scramble Music

Tail Tag is a round where beans chase each other trying to hold a tail at the time limit. The background music for this round is chaotic, fast, and slightly panicked — upbeat tempo, staccato notes, the musical equivalent of mild chaos.

Soundboard use: Drop it as background ambiance during any chaotic moment on stream. A team teamfight that goes wrong. Three people talking over each other on Discord. The setup phase of a complicated group activity. It works best as a brief 3-second drop, not a sustained play.

Recreating it: A fast (180+ BPM) staccato synth line — alternating between C4 and E4 with 16th-note rhythm, light pizzicato feel. Add a tambourine on every beat. Fade in over 0.3 seconds. Keep the exported clip to 3.0–3.5 seconds so it punctuates without dominating.


Comparison Table: Fall Guys Meme Sounds

SoundLengthEmotional ReadBest Use Case
Eliminated sting2.0–2.2sComic failureAny failure moment
Qualified chime1.8sGenuine winClutch or comeback plays
Crown victory music2.5sBig victoryActual victories, used sparingly
Slime splat0.8–1.2sImpact + absurdityLanded badly, oof reaction
Hex-A-Gone reveal2.0–2.5sDramatic revealBig news, plot twist
Bean “yay”0.6–0.8sSmall positiveSmall wins, wholesome moments
Falling wahhh1.5–1.8sDescending failureDeclining situations
Tail Tag scramble3.0–3.5sControlled chaosMulti-person chaos moments

Where to Source Original Recreation Audio

Since this guide covers recreations rather than ripped files, here are the practical tools for building each clip:

For musical stings (Eliminated, Qualified, Crown, Hex-A-Gone, Tail Tag):

  • LMMS — free, Windows-native DAW that handles all of the above
  • GarageBand — Mac only, but useful reference for brass and strings
  • Freesound.org CC0 section for brass hits, bell patches, and string swells to layer

For sound effects (Slime splat, Wahhh, Bean yay):

  • Audacity for pitch manipulation and envelope automation
  • Your own voice recording for the vocal-based clips
  • Freesound.org for wet/impact layer elements of the slime splat

For the wahhh pitch automation: Any DAW with clip-level pitch automation works. In LMMS, use the Beat+Bassline editor to trigger the sample and automate pitch with a LFO set to a single falling sweep.


Soundboard Software for Fall Guys Reactions

FeatureVoxBoosterResananceEXP Soundboard
Global hotkeysYesYesYes
Works in fullscreen gamesYes (low-level hook)Occasional conflictsOccasional conflicts
EAC compatibilityTested — no issuesNot testedNot tested
Mixes with mic audioYes (single stream)No (separate device)No (separate device)
Voice effects same streamYesNoNo
Slot organization64 slots, 8 pagesUnlimited foldersUnlimited slots
Free option30-day trialFreeFree
PlatformWindows 10/11WindowsWindows

VoxBooster’s main advantage for this specific use case is the single-stream mixing. If you want to play the Eliminated sting and immediately follow with a pitched-up voice to sell the bit, that is one device, not two. The low-latency WASAPI routing also means there is no audible gap between the hotkey press and the sound.


Setting Up Your Fall Guys Soundboard in VoxBooster

Step 1 — Prepare your clips

Export all eight clips as .mp3 at 192 kbps or .wav at 44.1 kHz / 16-bit. Name files clearly: eliminated-sting.mp3, qualified-chime.mp3, etc. Target volumes: normalize each clip to -3 dBFS peak so they sit near your voice level by default.

Step 2 — Import and organize

Open VoxBooster → Soundboard tab. Drag clips onto slots in Page 1. Suggested layout:

Slot 1 — Eliminated sting       (most-used — easiest hotkey)
Slot 2 — Qualified chime
Slot 3 — Slime splat
Slot 4 — Bean "yay"
Slot 5 — Falling wahhh
Slot 6 — Hex-A-Gone reveal
Slot 7 — Crown victory
Slot 8 — Tail Tag scramble

Step 3 — Assign global hotkeys

Right-click each slot → “Assign hotkey.” A practical layout:

Ctrl+Shift+1  →  Eliminated sting
Ctrl+Shift+2  →  Qualified chime
Ctrl+Shift+3  →  Slime splat
Ctrl+Shift+4  →  Bean "yay"
Ctrl+Shift+5  →  Falling wahhh
Ctrl+Shift+6  →  Hex-A-Gone reveal
Ctrl+Shift+7  →  Crown victory
Ctrl+Shift+8  →  Tail Tag scramble
Ctrl+Shift+0  →  Stop all

These fire from any fullscreen window, including Fall Guys itself.

Step 4 — Route to Discord

No changes needed in Discord if VoxBooster is already set as your input device. The soundboard clips route through the same virtual microphone as your voice. If you have not done this setup before, see the full Discord voice setup guide for step-by-step routing instructions.

Step 5 — OBS stream stings

For streams, you can also assign soundboard outputs directly in OBS as a secondary audio source. Add VoxBooster’s virtual microphone as a second audio input in OBS’s audio mixer — that gives you a separate volume fader for soundboard output independent of your voice, which is useful when you want the Eliminated sting loud but your mic quieter.


Timing and Etiquette

The Fall Guys sounds work because they are reaction tools, not attention-seeking noise. A few principles that keep them landing:

Wait for the beat. The Eliminated sting is perfect when dropped in the half-second pause after a failure moment. Drop it during the failure and it overlaps the natural reaction. Wait for the beat of silence and it lands on the shared emotion.

Use the stop key. Ctrl+Shift+0 should be the first hotkey you memorize. A Tail Tag scramble loop running ten seconds past its funny window is just noise.

Don’t chain sounds. Eliminated → slime splat → wahhh in rapid sequence is overkill. One reaction per moment. The rarity is part of what makes each drop land.

Match scale to situation. Crown victory is for actual wins. Bean “yay” is for small wins. Mixing those up (crown on something minor, yay on something huge) undercuts both sounds.


Discord Party Game Sessions

For party gaming groups, Fall Guys soundboard reactions function as shared vocabulary. When everyone on the call recognizes Eliminated the instant it plays, the laugh is communal rather than at one person’s expense. That’s the family-friendly charm of the whole Fall Guys audio library — even the defeat sounds feel like celebration.

A well-organized eight-slot Fall Guys page in VoxBooster covers every emotional beat of a party game session without overwhelming your hotkey layout. Page 1 dedicated to Fall Guys, Pages 2–8 available for other game libraries or general effects.


FAQ

What is the Fall Guys Eliminated sound and why is it a meme? The Eliminated defeat sting is the short descending musical cue that plays when your bean fails a round. Its mix of cheerful instrumentation and cruel timing turned it into a universal symbol of comic failure across gaming streams and social media clips. The meme spreads because the emotion is instantly relatable.

Are these Fall Guys soundboard clips legal to use on stream? This guide covers original recreations — sounds inspired by the game’s audio design but created independently. Original recreations carry no rights issues for streaming. Ripping audio files directly from the game executable is a different matter and is not what this guide recommends.

Does the Fall Guys soundboard work in Discord without extra routing? With VoxBooster you do not need a separate virtual audio cable. VoxBooster exposes a virtual microphone device; you select it in Discord’s Voice & Video settings. Soundboard hotkeys then route through that same device alongside your real voice with no additional configuration.

Do Fall Guys soundboard hotkeys work while in a fullscreen game? Yes, if the soundboard app uses a low-level keyboard hook. VoxBooster’s global hotkeys fire from any fullscreen window including most party games. A small number of titles with kernel-level anti-cheat may interfere — EAC-based games have been tested and generally work fine.

How short should my Fall Guys reaction clips be? Keep reaction clips between 1.5 and 3 seconds. The Eliminated sting is effective at around 2 seconds. Longer clips interrupt conversation flow; shorter clips can feel cut off. The sweet spot for party-game reactions is the moment of emotion — not the buildup to it.

Can I stack voice effects on top of soundboard clips in VoxBooster? Yes. VoxBooster processes both soundboard audio and microphone audio through the same signal chain. You can play the Eliminated sting while simultaneously running a pitch-shifted voice effect, and Discord or OBS receives a single mixed output stream without any routing changes.

Is Fall Guys appropriate for family streaming content? Fall Guys is rated PEGI 3 and ESRB Everyone. The game’s humor is entirely slapstick and its audio design is deliberately cheerful even in defeat. Soundboard recreations of its audio carry that same family-friendly character and are safe for all-ages streams.


Build the Board

Fall Guys has one of the rare audio libraries where even the failure sounds are fun to hear. The Eliminated sting is genuinely cathartic. The slime splat is genuinely physical. The bean “yay” is genuinely wholesome. That tonal range — from comic defeat to genuine celebration — covers most of what happens in a party gaming session or a casual Discord call.

Eight clips, one page, eight hotkeys. You do not need more than that to make the Fall Guys reactions part of your regular vocabulary.

VoxBooster’s trial covers everything here — 64 slots, global hotkeys, WASAPI routing, single-stream mixing. Download and build your first Fall Guys page.

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