Xiqia
Nova Deck station cover
Oldies

Nova Deck

Japan · Japanese · 96 kbps

Listeners leave this oldies room open all night — immersive, steady, cinematic.

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Live frequency

Signal routed via SomaFM Suburbs of Goa. Press play to tune in on this page.

Nova Deck registers on the Xiqia frequency index as a oldies corridor broadcasting from Japan. Listeners leave this oldies room open all night — immersive, steady, cinematic. The signal locks at 96 kbps — enough detail for immersive headphones without crushing mobile data.

What defines this room is sub-bass corridors with dub-influenced spacing. Segues feel intentional: synthetic air between tracks, IDs that glow rather than interrupt, and a clock that respects late listeners. Xiqia catalogs temperament, not just metadata — this is a frequency you choose for mood, not background noise.

The listening field feels like a midnight coding session with violet monitor glow. You notice the atmosphere when it stops — the station never demands performance from you. Work, drive, read, or vanish into the mix; the broadcast maintains its own cinematic pace.

Musically, the oldies lane favors depth and texture over novelty stunts. Session players, regional scenes, and second-listen tracks appear beside catalog staples. For wider context, explore Internet radio — then return here for the specific Xiqia presentation of Nova Deck.

Language stays anchored in Japanese, which matters for diaspora audiences and learners tuning across borders. Japan broadcast habits surface in cadence: holiday marathons, news windows, weekend extended blocks. Nova Deck honors those rhythms instead of flattening them into generic international filler.

The core listener profile skews toward night drivers who treat radio as film score. Newcomers are welcome, but the programmers clearly know who stays past the first break — repeat visits, long sessions, loyalty to a frequency that feels like a place.

Background: Nova Deck emerged when terrestrial dials crowded and online rooms needed identity. It behaves like radio — clocks, seasons, presenter voice — not a shuffle app wearing broadcast clothing. Stream rights vary by region; Xiqia describes, we do not host audio.

Navigate outward via our Oldies frequency hub, the Japan grid, or homepage shelves when you want contrast without leaving the network.

Bookmark Nova Deck when you want reliability — the same neon priorities, the same respect for attention, the same immersive calm when you return at midnight.

Schedules shift, presenters rotate, streams hiccup. The spirit — sub-bass corridors with dub-influenced spacing serving oldies listeners in Japan — is what we index. Tune the player below, stay if the signal fits, and explore related frequencies when you want a new corridor.

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