
Ohota's musical journey began in 2008 when he joined a Berlin-based punk band. Over time, his interests shifted towards electronic music, leading to the creation of his solo works. Today, his style can be described as a mix of techno and ambient, where powerful rhythms coexist with deep emotional textures. Ohota is known for his experimental approach. His compositions are characterized by genre synthesis, rich emotional layers, and philosophical undertones. For instance, the track "Everything Is as It Should Be" explores ideas of accepting life as it is, while the song "Normal Person" delves into themes of identity and social norms.

Ohota

Composer
for Composer in DEN OF WOLVES (Live Action Film Adaptation)
Suggested by nihilus

2097. A corporate city-state in international waters runs on private armies and human assets instead of laws. A hired retrieval team is sent to extract a “bio-asset” from a rival tower, expecting a sedated package. Instead they find a man — awake, aware, and fused to a predictive warfare system mapped directly into his brain. His mind can forecast unrest, calculate the cheapest way to control entire populations, and turn collapse into profit. The instant the team makes contact, his signal goes live across the city. Now every major security force is inbound: one corporation wants to cage him forever, another wants to sell him to the highest bidder, and the company that created him would rather burn the whole district than let him exist anywhere else. What was supposed to be a grab-and-go turns into open war across rain-slick platforms over black ocean. The crew gets hunted, cut off, and betrayed. The one calling shots refuses to hand him over and flips the mission: no delivery, no ransom — get him off the grid so he can be destroyed on his own terms before he’s turned back into property. Most of the team doesn’t survive that choice. In the end, the asset chooses death over recapture, wiping the clean original. But a damaged copy of the predictive system is secretly imprinted into one survivor, creating something even more volatile: not a controlled weapon, but an unstable version of it living in someone no corporation can own. EDIT: The target is a Burmese Lethwei fighter with cybernetic augments who takes on the entire crew in h2h combat
