My Glorious Days

"Shade, on Kichikuou Rance's version of My Glorious Days."

- For H scenes. I thought it should exude the feeling of a king.

About
My Glorious Days is a recurring music track that is used throughout the Rance Series. Commonly thought of as the title character's theme music, its is generally played whenever Rance achieves a notable conquest in his adventures, sexual or otherwise, and is occasionally referred to as his "Brutal Theme" as a result. First debuting in Rance IV, it has since become synonymous of the franchise as a whole, and is closely associated with its general themes and content.

The song itself is an altered version of Auferstanden Aus Ruinen, the East German National Anthem. The earliest versions of the track were simply sped up versions of the anthem, giving it a much more upbeat and rambunctious sound than the original. More recent versions utilize different instruments and arrangements of the anthem in order to make themselves relate more specifically to the qualities of the game in which they are featured in. For example, Rance Quest, which heavily parodies the Dragon Quest series in its presentation, uses a chiptune version of the track as an allusion to the music of 8 bit-era role playing games, and Kichikuou Rance, which revolves around Rance becoming the king of Leazas, prominently features swelling trumpets and drums in order to sound more similar to a royal procession. In addition, softer and more somber versions of the track are occasionally used during scenes in which Rance is meant to be acting in a softer and more emotionally-vulnerable manner. Canonically, the theme first played when Rance violently stole the virginity of Princess Lia Parapara Leazas after uncovering and foiling the kidnapping ring that she had been running. This brutal and audacious action is directly responsible for catapulting Rance from being a powerful-yet-unimportant mercenary to The Continent's greatest hero, as it is what caused Lia, who had never been punished by anyone prior, to fall madly in love with him, earning him her entire country's loyalty in the process. Because of this, the track is generally seen as being symbolic of Rance's already massive ego swelling to titanic proportions with feelings of invincibility and global conquest.This is supported by the "Collapse" ending of Kichikuou Rance, which occurs if Leazas Castle falls against an enemy attack, which features the statement "So long my shining days."