Ordering is fairly easy. I typically order by order of appearance unless the track is one of those victory or game over tracks, which I'll place at the end. However, this is where it gets tricky for me. Most of time tracks only appear once or as a theme in a game. For example, each level in Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex has a unique track. Let's say I got the track for Weathering Heights and it was unnamed. I would simply name it Weathering Heights. Another example: The Hang 'Em High, High Time and Flaming Passion levels from Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped are based on Arabian environments, so their respective tracks I have simply titled as Arabian Levels, Arabian Levels Bonus Rounds and Arabian Levels Death Routes. Tracks that are used in one or more places, I name accordingly. For example, the title screen and warp room share the same track in Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex, so I named the track accordingly as Title Screen & Warp Room. This is where complications come in. When naming missing tracks -- those games, such as Arc the Lad: Twilight of the Spirits, that have official soundtracks, but don't contain every single track for some reason -- not just unofficial soundtracks, the tracks you already have, the official tracks, have an actual name, not just a name based after a level, mission, etc. For example, Spooks of Halloween Town in Kingdom Hearts isn't Halloween Town Battle Music, it's Spooks of Halloween Town. The majority of those tracks are used in various areas, even during cutscenes and such, so I can't just name the file something such as, "Happy Forest, Peace Forest, Skin Forest, Hair Forest, Sun Forest, Moon Forest, Red Forest, Green Forest and Yellow Forest," because it would just look weird, and I'd run out of characters. So how do you name those types of tracks?