The falling scream is doing two jobs at once: it tells the audience the body is moving downward and it tells them how the character feels about it. A long held vowel reads as terror; a short clipped one reads as accident; a doppler-shifted yelp reads as comedy. The pitch shape of the voice carries more information than the visual of the fall, which is why animators have leaned on it since the days of cartoon falls and the famous Wilhelm.
This set gives you 27 variations across that emotional range — sustained plunge yells, abrupt panicked cries, doppler drops with the classic frequency bend, and the cartoon falling staples that still work in modern edits. Free to use, no attribution required, and you can pull the WAV straight into your timeline. Useful for action scenes, video-game death cues, falling-debris gags, and any sketch where someone goes off a ledge.