Full-song MP3
Text-to-music prompts
Optional custom lyrics
Commercial rights included
How it works

From prompt to finished track

1

Describe the track

One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Dubstep prompts above or write your own.

2

Generate and iterate

The AI composes an original track from scratch — no samples. Regenerate variations until one fits, or tweak the prompt and lyrics.

3

Download the MP3

Grab the full song as an MP3 with commercial rights included, ready for videos, streams and playlists.

Styles

Dubstep styles you can generate

Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.

UK Dubstep

Skream and Burial at 140 BPM, deep dub-influenced bass, sparse 2-step drums, dark atmospherics, no drops — sustained tension. South London 2005 sound.

Brostep

Skrillex and Excision at 140 BPM, mid-range wobble bass, huge drops, dramatic builds, festival-anthem energy. American 2011 mainstream sound.

Riddim

Modern minimal dubstep at 140 BPM, sparse triplet bass patterns, hyper-aggressive sound design, mosh-pit drop sections. 2010s underground.

Melodic Dubstep

Seven Lions and Illenium at 140 BPM, emotional chord progressions, sung vocals, atmospheric pads, melodic-rather-than-purely-aggressive drops.

Future Garage / Post-Dubstep

James Blake and Mount Kimbie at 130 BPM, ambient textures, restrained bass, R&B-influenced vocals. The cerebral end of bass music.

Tearout / Deathstep

Modern brostep at 140 BPM with maximum-distortion sound design, machine-gun snare rolls, neuro-tinged bass. The aggressive ceiling of bass music.

Made for

Who uses dubstep music?

Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.

Game Devs

Combat sequences, boss battles, cyberpunk and sci-fi narratives. Dubstep drops deliver impact that scored hits can't replicate.

Content Creators

Action montages, transformation reveals, dramatic transitions. The drop is purpose-built for video editing punctuation.

Trailer Editors

Film trailers, game trailers, sports promos. Modern action-trailer music borrows heavily from dubstep drop dynamics.

Sports Producers

Extreme sports edits, snowboard films, action sports highlights. The 140 BPM half-time matches slow-motion cuts.

Festival DJs

Original dubstep drops for festival sets. Massive drops without licensing top-40 bass-music tracks.

Brand Marketers

Esports, gaming hardware, energy drinks, performance products. Dubstep reads as aggressive, modern, drop-ready.

What you get
Full-song MP3 generationText-to-music promptsOptional custom lyricsBuilt-in style presetsAI prompt composerVoice-to-prompt inputTrack history & replayRegenerate variationsCommercial rights included

How do you prompt dubstep that actually drops right?

A dubstep generator writes the whole half-time, 140 BPM track from a text prompt — the wobble bass, the build, the drop — composed from scratch instead of pieced together from sampled bass presets. Describe the subgenre and the bass character, and the AI produces a finished MP3 with the low-end weight the drop needs.

Original composition matters more here than in most genres because the drop is the single moment a listener judges the whole track on. A generic sample-pack wobble reads as generic; a track built specifically for your prompt — "wobble bass, LFO modulation, mid-range filter sweep, growl character" — can be shaped exactly to the energy you're after.

UK dubstep, brostep, riddim: naming the difference

UK dubstep is dark, sparse and dub-influenced at 140 BPM with no drop at all — sustained tension in the Skream and Burial tradition. Brostep added the massive drop, the mid-range wobble bass and festival-anthem energy that defined the genre's American breakout. Riddim strips it down further: sparse triplet bass patterns and hyper-aggressive sound design built for a mosh-pit moment. Melodic dubstep goes the other direction with emotional chord progressions and sung vocals over drops that land as cathartic rather than aggressive.

For the drop itself, prompt "massive drop, multi-layer bass, snare crack, full-spectrum sub" — and check the result on speakers with real sub-bass response, since laptop speakers underrepresent the low end that makes a dubstep drop land.

From boss battles to trailer climaxes

Game devs use dubstep drops for combat sequences and boss battles where a scored hit doesn't deliver enough impact. Content creators cut action montages and transformation reveals around the drop's timing, trailer editors borrow the same drop dynamics for film and game trailers, and sports producers rely on the 140 BPM half-time feel to match slow-motion cuts in extreme-sports edits.

Original drops, no licensing search

Festival DJs use the generator for massive drops without licensing a top-40 bass-music track for the set, and brand marketers in esports, gaming hardware and energy drinks reach for dubstep because it reads as aggressive and modern. Commercial rights are included on paid plans, so a track generated for a set, a trailer, or a campaign is cleared to use under your own name as soon as it renders.

Drop the bass

Pick the subgenre. Get the drop. Generate a dubstep track ready to shake speakers.

Free to try · No credit card required

Keep exploring

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between dubstep and brostep?

UK dubstep is dark, sparse, dub-influenced at 140 BPM with no drops. Brostep added the massive drop, mid-range wobble bass, and festival-anthem energy. Specify which.

Can I get authentic wobble bass?

Yes. Prompt "wobble bass, LFO modulation, mid-range filter sweep, growl character" and the AI generates the iconic Skrillex-era bass design. Useful for brostep and riddim.

Will the drops hit hard?

Prompt for "massive drop, multi-layer bass, snare crack, full-spectrum sub" and the AI produces drops with proper low-end weight. Listen on speakers with sub — laptop speakers underrepresent.

Best subgenre for melodic content?

Melodic dubstep — Seven Lions, Illenium, Said the Sky lineage. Emotional chord progressions, sung vocals, drops that feel cathartic rather than aggressive.

Tempo?

Dubstep universally sits at 140 BPM (the half-time feel makes it feel like 70). Future garage drops to 130. The 140 BPM standard rarely varies.