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.