Brother Sharp said: Just because they have done good stuff in the past it does not mean we should not raise our voice if we see Roll20 heading in the wrong direction. If they continue with adding royalty free tracks, I would be unhappy and most probably lose hope on whatever next thing they bring until I cancel my sub and ditch this for other alternatives. These opinions need to be voiced, so Roll20 can judge as a team on which clients to please and which to let go. Unless they have psychic powers, they will not be able to tell how the community feels. If your future vision for Roll20 is to listen to every 1000 tracks added just to realize that none of them has what you are looking for (Which I am going through), then by all means keep on cheering them. I agree that people need to voice their opinions, but people also need to realize that many (I'm guessing, here, because I only see relatively few users posting) of us are unconcerned with the Jukebox. Honestly, does the sound contribute to a good game? Maybe. Is it earth-shattering to not have it? I guess for streamers maybe? Maybe I'm just old because the jukebox never even enticed me to look at it. I'm impressed that they got a solution (or at least one solution) developed as quickly as they did. But honestly, I'd rather see them working on getting font support for character sheets and handouts because that's what I use the most, and that could add a lot to the game—more than music does for me. Why did I post this? Only to bring to light that if it is the level of our "outrage" that implies importance, that there are many people who aren't posting on this issue. Roll20 definitely needs to know what the community wants, but we need to remember that a topic about one aspect of the system will only garner complaints about that aspect from people who use that feature and that user-base may be relatively small compared to the entire community—so, a bunch of complaints in one, very specific topic, does not equate to importance. I'd be very interested to see if there are any stats on how many games use the Jukebox. Perhaps it's a bigger deal than I realize.