A brand new Papa Roach song will feature on the soundtrack for Netflix’s animated Devil May Cry adaptation.
The second season of Devil May Cry is due to hit the streamer next month (May 12). Based on the violent fantasy series of games, Adi Shankar’s animated adaptation sees “sinister forces at play, [trying] to open the portal between the human and demon realms. In the middle of it all is Dante, an orphaned demon-hunter-for-hire, unaware that the fate of both worlds hangs around his neck.”
Devil May Cry’s first season featured Limp Bizkit classic ‘Rollin’ as the theme song, while Papa Roach’s ‘Last Resort’ soundtracked the launch trailer. Evanescence also contributed a brand new song ‘Afterlife’ to the series. Explaining Devil May Cry’s nu-metal heavy soundtrack, series creator Adi Shankar said: “My universe is set in a late ’90s/early 2000s PS2 era of the world. It’s not set in modern times. It’s set in my memory of the world, pre- and post-9/11. My music choices reflect this.”
Yesterday (April 28) Papa Roach confirmed they’d be returning to the Devil May Cry soundtrack with brand new track ‘See U In Hell’. The song is a collaboration with rapper Hanumankind and will be released May 7.
😈🪳NEW MUSIC🔥 ft Hanumankind for @netflix Devil May Cry season 2, drops next week. https://t.co/wezEL9HF7J
— Papa Roach (@paparoach) April 28, 2026
Papa Roach are set to release a new album later this year. So far, the group have released three singles from the record – ‘Even If It Kills Me’, ‘Wake Up Calling’ and ‘Braindead’. The group have also confirmed a UK and Ireland arena tour for November – you can get tickets here.
“ No one song really reflects the whole sound of a [new] Papa Roach album,” vocalist Jacoby Shaddix told NME last year. “We are a rock band, but we like to go down rabbit holes and see how far we can push the boundaries. Our fans are willing to go on that journey, so it’s still an exciting thing for us to get in the studio and discover where this thing is taking us.”
“There are a few songs coming that are a bit heavier, and we did go in and intentionally say ‘Let’s bring back those big, huge riffs’,” he continued. “After all, we’re seeing this resurgence of the nu-metal era happening, so we wanted to celebrate that early feistiness in our guitar riffs.”
In other news, Grand Theft Auto 6 is set to launch this November and Take-Two boss Strauss Zelnick reckons plenty of people will phone in sick at work so they can play.



















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