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The Living Tombstone
The Living Tombstone Brings the Multiplayer Tour to New Jersey on October 23: The Internet’s Biggest Gaming Band Takes the Stage
March 12 @ 08:00 – 17:00

New Jersey’s live music landscape continues to evolve with performances that reflect the changing ways audiences discover, experience, and celebrate music. On Friday, October 23, one of the most influential digital-era music acts will arrive in the Garden State when The Living Tombstone brings its Multiplayer Tour to New Jersey.
For more than fifteen years, The Living Tombstone has built a global fanbase by blending electronic music, gaming culture, storytelling, and internet-driven creativity into a powerful multimedia music phenomenon. With millions of fans across streaming platforms and social media, the duo has become one of the most recognizable musical forces in the online entertainment world.
The upcoming performance represents a major moment for fans of gaming culture, electronic music, and internet-born artistry. As New Jersey continues to host innovative live music experiences that connect artists with diverse audiences, concerts like this highlight the expanding intersection between gaming, digital media, and live performance. Readers can explore additional coverage of the region’s thriving music culture through Explore New Jersey’s Music section, where performances across genres—from classic rock to cutting-edge digital artists—are featured throughout the year.
For fans who have followed The Living Tombstone’s rise from YouTube phenomenon to global touring act, the Multiplayer Tour represents a celebration of the band’s remarkable journey.
From Internet Creators to Global Music Phenomenon
The Living Tombstone is the creative collaboration between Yoav Landau and Sam Haft, two artists who have spent the past decade and a half redefining what a music career can look like in the digital age.
Often referred to by fans simply as TLT, the duo first gained attention through YouTube, where their unique blend of electronic production, storytelling, and pop sensibility quickly attracted a dedicated following.
What began as independent music inspired by gaming culture soon evolved into something far larger. Today, The Living Tombstone’s YouTube channel has amassed more than nine million subscribers, while their songs have generated over 70 billion streams across platforms—a staggering achievement that places them among the most widely consumed independent music acts in the world.
Their music exists at the intersection of multiple cultural worlds: gaming communities, animation fandoms, internet storytelling, and modern electronic music.
That ability to move fluidly between digital subcultures has made The Living Tombstone a defining act of the internet music era.
The Sound That Defined Gaming Music Culture
While many artists draw inspiration from games, The Living Tombstone has become synonymous with the genre itself.
Their music blends elements of:
• electronic dance music
• alternative rock
• synth-driven pop
• cinematic storytelling
The result is a sound that feels simultaneously futuristic and emotionally resonant.
Their songs often explore themes rooted in gaming narratives, fictional worlds, and character-driven storytelling, creating music that feels deeply connected to the communities that inspired it.
This approach has allowed TLT to build one of the most loyal fanbases in online music culture.
Listeners are not just fans—they are participants in a shared digital universe where music, storytelling, and fandom intersect.
The Viral Success of “Five Nights at Freddy’s”
One of the duo’s most iconic tracks, Five Nights at Freddy’s, became a defining anthem for gaming culture.
The song achieved massive success online, eventually earning RIAA certification and reaching No. 4 on the Dance/Electronic chart. Its popularity extended far beyond the gaming community, demonstrating how internet-born music could break into mainstream recognition.
The track’s influence continued to grow when it was featured in the end credits of the film Five Nights at Freddy’s, produced by Blumhouse Productions and Universal Pictures.
The placement brought the song full circle—from fan-created gaming anthem to an official part of the franchise’s cinematic universe.
Another TLT fan favorite, It’s Been So Long, continued that connection when it appeared in the end credits of Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, further cementing the duo’s place within gaming culture history.
A Touring Force With a Global Audience
While The Living Tombstone began as an internet music project, their live performances have evolved into full-scale concert experiences.
Their recent 2025 World Tour spanned four continents, selling out venues across North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. These performances proved that the band’s digital fanbase translates powerfully into real-world audiences eager to experience their music live.
The Multiplayer Tour continues that momentum, bringing TLT’s immersive live production to cities across the United States.
Fans attending the New Jersey show can expect a concert that combines music, visuals, and storytelling in ways that reflect the duo’s multimedia origins.
Rather than simply performing songs, The Living Tombstone creates an experience designed to mirror the energy of gaming culture itself—dynamic, immersive, and constantly evolving.
Why The Living Tombstone Represents a New Era of Music
The success of The Living Tombstone reflects a broader transformation in the music industry.
Traditional pathways to success—record labels, radio airplay, and physical album sales—no longer define how artists reach audiences.
Instead, creators like Yoav Landau and Sam Haft have built careers through direct connections with fans across platforms such as YouTube, streaming services, and online communities.
This digital-first approach allows artists to experiment with creative concepts that might not fit within traditional industry frameworks.
For The Living Tombstone, that freedom has meant exploring music inspired by video games, internet culture, and storytelling formats rarely seen in mainstream pop.
The result is a career that feels both innovative and deeply connected to the communities that support it.
The Cultural Impact of Gaming Music
Gaming culture has grown into one of the most influential entertainment ecosystems in the world.
Millions of players interact with games daily, forming communities that extend across social media, streaming platforms, and fan-created content.
Music plays a powerful role in that culture, helping define the emotional tone of games and the shared experiences of players.
Artists like The Living Tombstone have helped elevate gaming music into a legitimate musical genre—one that stands alongside pop, rock, and electronic music as a global cultural force.
Their songs have become soundtracks not only for games but for the communities that gather around them.
New Jersey’s Expanding Live Music Scene
The arrival of the Multiplayer Tour also highlights the continued evolution of New Jersey’s live music ecosystem.
The state has long been known for its passionate music audiences and historic venues, hosting artists from every genre imaginable. Today, that tradition continues as venues embrace artists whose careers began online as well as those rooted in traditional music scenes.
From indie rock to electronic music to gaming-inspired acts like The Living Tombstone, New Jersey audiences have demonstrated a willingness to support diverse musical experiences.
This openness has made the Garden State an increasingly important stop for artists exploring new forms of live performance.
A Concert Built for the Digital Generation
When The Living Tombstone takes the stage on October 23, fans will experience more than just a concert—they will step into a world where music, gaming, and digital storytelling collide.
The Multiplayer Tour represents a celebration of everything the duo has built over the past fifteen years: a global fan community, a groundbreaking catalog of music, and a reputation as pioneers of internet-driven artistry.
For longtime listeners who discovered TLT through viral YouTube videos and gaming fandoms, the show offers a chance to hear those songs performed live.
For newer fans discovering the band through streaming platforms and gaming culture, the concert becomes an introduction to one of the most influential acts to emerge from the digital music era.
As the lights go up and the first synths echo through the venue, New Jersey audiences will witness a performance that captures the spirit of modern entertainment—where music, technology, and community come together to create something entirely new.








