Endlesss
Multiplayer Loop · Live
Get
Multiplayer Loop Studio · Live

Jam now. Loop forever.

Endlesss is a cloud-collaborative loop studio. Drop into a public jam or open a private room. Layer loops in real time on an 8-channel retrospective looper. Built by Tim Exile. Free on iOS, desktop and DAW plugin available.

8-CH LOOPER REALTIME CLOUD iOS · MAC · VST/AU
JAM #47 · F MAJOR
Late Room Friday
LIVE
Workflow

Three moves and you're in the jam.

From cold open to layered beat in under two minutes. Anywhere with a connection.

01

Open or join a jam.

Hit "public jams" to drop into a community room — strangers, vibes, no commitment. Or open your own private room and invite friends with a link. Either way, you're inside an 8-channel looper waiting for someone to press record.

02

Lay down a loop.

Grab a drum pack, fire a synth pattern, sample your mic, or play an AUv3 plugin. Capture a one- or two-bar loop. Commit it. Within seconds it's live in the cloud and the rest of the room hears your contribution layered on top of theirs.

03

Remix, evolve, export.

Twist the FX rack — 12 effects on tap — on your loops or anyone else's. Stems and movies export out. The jam keeps running while you sleep; come back tomorrow and the same room has new ideas dropped in by other players.

The killer feature

Real strangers. Real time. Real jam.

Most "collaborative" music apps mean two people leaving voice notes on a Google Doc for tracks. Endlesss is the actual room. Open a public jam at any hour and you'll find producers in Tokyo, Berlin, Mexico City and São Paulo layering beats over the same 8-channel looper, watching each other commit loops, chatting in the side panel.

The honest trade-off: this needs a connection. On flaky wifi the realtime feel softens into something closer to async — still functional, just less alive. On good fibre, it feels like a band in a room.

FOUNDED BY · TIM EXILE — ELECTRONIC MUSICIAN, LIVE-LOOPING PERFORMER · HABLAB LONDON LIMITED · LAUNCHED MARCH 2020
tim_exile
CH 1·2
maya.kz
CH 3·4
kez_sp
CH 5
you
CH 6
Built for

Anyone who'd rather jam together than work alone.

The Endlesss community skews electronic, but the workflow lands wherever loops do.

B

Bedroom producers

Late nights, headphones on, public jam. Beats grow by themselves between drinks.

L

Live performers

Loop-pedal logic on tour — except the loops are cloud-shared with collaborators back home or on stage.

B

Beatmakers

Drum-pack-first workflow with built-in synths and FX. Sketch an idea in five minutes, take it to your DAW.

T

Teachers & students

Music classrooms that need a low-stakes way for students to play together remotely. Drop-in, drop-out, no setup.

What's inside

Eight channels, twelve FX, infinite players.

The full studio in your pocket and on your laptop.

Flagship

8-channel retrospective looper.

The core of Endlesss — an 8-channel looper optimized for speed. Capture a loop, commit it, layer the next channel. Retrospective recording means you can capture what just played without thinking about hitting record first. Loops sync to the room's BPM automatically, and every committed loop is instantly visible to other players in the same jam.

12 core FX

Reverb, delay, distortion, low-pass, high-pass, plus DJ-style performance effects.

Sampler

Mic, guitar, hardware synth — sample anything, play it polyphonic, share with the room.

Ableton Link

Lock timing with Link-aware apps and hardware. Endlesss plays nicely with your existing rig.

Stem & movie export

Bounce stems out to your DAW. Or movie-format export for video producers.

Anywhere

iOS, macOS, VST/AU plugin.

Free iOS download with the full multiplayer feature. Endlesss Studio is the macOS desktop app plus a VST/AU plugin that drops directly into Logic Pro, Ableton Live, FL Studio, Pro Tools, Cubase, Studio One and Reaper. Same cloud account across mobile and desktop — start a jam on your phone, finish on a laptop.

Compared

Where Endlesss wins. Where it doesn't.

The collaboration space has four very different shapes. Pick the one that fits your jam.

  Endlesss Soundtrap Ableton Link Splice
Realtime multiplayer jam UI Yes — flagship Async tracks Sync only · no UI No
Cloud-persistent jam rooms Yes Yes No Sample library only
8-channel retrospective looper Yes — flagship Track-based No No
Built-in instruments & FX Yes Yes No Samples only
Mobile (iOS) free tier Yes Limited free iOS partial Paid only
DAW VST/AU plugin Yes — Endlesss Studio No No Yes — Bridge
Community size Smaller · loop-focused Larger n/a Massive · industry-standard
Track-based DAW workflow No — loop-first Yes n/a Via paired DAW
Honest read: Endlesss is the wrong tool if you want a track-based DAW shared with collaborators — Soundtrap is closer to that. It is also the wrong tool if you want the largest pool of users and samples — Splice owns that ground by a wide margin. Endlesss's actual lane is realtime multiplayer loop jamming with a shared room and shared FX rack. Different products, different jobs.
From the rooms

What players say after the jam.

Including the ones who've fought their wifi.

★★★★★

"I jam with people in Brazil and Korea at 2am and we make beats together. Nothing else feels like this. It's the closest thing to a real band on the internet."

N
Nico R.
Producer, Berlin
★★★★★

"Use it live on tour. Loop-pedal logic but my bandmate back home can drop in midway through the set. Audiences lose their minds when they see who's actually playing."

A
Avi K.
Live performer, London
★★★★

"Community is genuinely the best thing about it. Honestly though: on bad wifi the realtime feel falls apart. Loop-first workflow also took me a week to click — if you came from a track DAW, expect adjustment."

S
Sam P.
Beatmaker, Toronto
The story

A London bet on multiplayer music.

Endlesss shipped on iOS in March 2020, about ten days before lockdowns put half the planet inside its bedrooms. The timing was accidental but the thesis wasn't: founder Tim Exile — an electronic musician known for live-looping performances — had been building toward a multiplayer jam tool for years. The pandemic just turned the underlying question into something everyone needed an answer to.

The iOS version got real traction immediately. Endlesss Studio followed in late 2020, bringing the same multiplayer thesis to macOS as a desktop app plus a VST/AU plugin for direct DAW integration. The product has stayed focused on the same single idea ever since: a shared cloud room with a real-time looper and built-in instruments, where strangers and friends can layer beats together over hours or days.

The honest trade-offs sit in plain sight. Loop-first workflow takes adjustment if you come from track-based DAW thinking. Realtime needs a connection — on weak wifi the live feel softens. The community is smaller than mainstream sample marketplaces like Splice; there's depth here but not the same sheer volume. And the company has been a small independent operation through 2024 turbulence in the music-tech sector, which means the product moves at indie cadence rather than venture-funded blitz.

None of which dents the core thing. If you want to jam with another human in real time over the internet, there is still nothing else that does it quite like Endlesss.

FAQ

Real questions, real answers.

What you wanted to know before opening the first jam.

What exactly is Endlesss?
Endlesss is a multiplayer loop studio. You and your friends — or a community room of strangers — share a cloud jam where everyone layers loops in real time over an 8-channel retrospective looper. It runs on iOS, macOS and as a VST/AU plugin. The whole point is to make the act of jamming social again, the way a band in a room is social, but over the internet and asynchronous-friendly. Built by Tim Exile and Hablab London.
Is Endlesss free?
The iOS app is free to download with full access to multiplayer jams and the core looper. An optional in-app purchase called Endlesss Infinite (about $4.49) unlocks expanded content. Endlesss Studio — the macOS desktop app and VST/AU plugin — is a separate paid product starting around $99 with introductory pricing. The free tier is genuinely enough to use the social jam features without spending.
How does the multiplayer jam actually work?
Someone opens a jam — public or private — and invites people in. Each participant lays down loops on the 8-channel looper using built-in instruments, the sampler or their own input. When you commit a loop it goes to the cloud and the other players see and hear it within seconds. You can keep building on each other's parts, remix others' loops with effects, or pull stems out for further work. The session is persistent: people drop in and out across hours or days and the jam keeps evolving.
What instruments and sounds are built in?
Endlesss ships with multiple high-quality drum, synth and bass packs covering electronic and beat-focused genres. The FX rack includes 12 core effects — reverb, delay, distortion, low-pass and high-pass filters, and others — for both creative sound design and DJ-style live performance manipulation. The sampler instrument lets you record from a microphone or external synth, then play that sample as a polyphonic preset. AUv3 plugin support means you can also bring third-party instruments into the workflow on iOS.
Can I export Endlesss material to my DAW?
Yes. You can export stems out of Endlesss and drop them straight into Logic Pro, Ableton Live, FL Studio, Pro Tools, Cubase or any other DAW. Movie-format export is also available for video creators. Endlesss Studio additionally runs as a VST/AU plugin, so on desktop you can use it directly inside your DAW timeline rather than bouncing back and forth. Ableton Link integration keeps timing locked when running alongside other Link-aware apps.
Is Endlesss iOS-only?
No. Endlesss launched on iOS in 2020 and was later expanded into Endlesss Studio for macOS desktop. The desktop app integrates with major DAWs via VST and AU plugin formats. Mobile and desktop sync through the same cloud account, so you can start a jam on your phone walking home and finish it on a laptop with full keyboard control later. No native Android client at the time of writing.
How does Endlesss compare to Ableton Link or Soundtrap?
Ableton Link is a tempo-sync protocol — it makes apps stay in time, but it has no shared UI, no shared content, no jam room. Endlesss is the actual shared room with shared loops on top of (and compatible with) that sync layer. Soundtrap is a browser-based DAW with track-based recording and async collaboration; Endlesss is loop-based with real-time multiplayer. Different workflows: Soundtrap is closer to a Google Doc for tracks, Endlesss is closer to a live music chatroom.
Who built Endlesss?
Endlesss is built by Hablab London Limited and was founded by Tim Exile, an electronic musician known for live-looping performances. The app shipped on iOS in March 2020 just before global lockdowns, which turned out to be ideal timing for a remote-jamming product. The desktop version followed in late 2020. The company has been independently developing the platform with focus on the multiplayer thesis that drew the original audience.
What are the honest limitations?
Three honest ones. First, the workflow is loop-based, not track-based — if you think in song structure with verses and choruses, the looper-first mental model takes adjustment. Second, multiplayer needs a cloud connection: on bad wifi the realtime feel suffers and you may drift into async-feeling sessions. Third, the community is smaller than mainstream DAW scenes like Splice — there's depth but not the same sample-marketplace volume. Trade-offs, not deal-breakers, and the social side is genuinely unique.
Open the room

The jam is already running.

Free on iOS. Public rooms always open. Loop with strangers, finish with friends, drag the WAV into your DAW.

Join a jam → Get the desktop