Altar is a newly released, open-source guitar amp simulator that offers a surprisingly deep feature set for a free plugin. The amp suite is currently in beta (v0.2b) and available exclusively for Windows.
Altar features three amp channels. Two of them are native to Altar (a clean channel and a high-gain channel), offering everything from glassy cleans to aggressive distortion.
The third channel supports NAM (Neural Amp Modeler) files, allowing you to load your own custom neural amp models directly within the plugin.
That said, Altar’s standout feature is its modular design. You can freely drag and reorder amp, cab, and FX modules in the signal chain, bypassing elements as needed. This kind of flexibility is typically found in commercial guitar suites, and it gives you full control over your guitar tone workflow.
Altar includes a cab designer, which lets you create your own impulse responses (IRs) using a built-in editor. You can share these with others or even sell them. There’s also an FX suite onboard, covering multiple overdrive modes, reverb, chorus, ring mod, and several delay types, including glitch and reverse.
I love that the plugin goes even beyond traditional amp simulation. Altar integrates pitch-shifting with semitone snapping, sub-octave blending, and full automation support.
For quick tonal shaping, the plugin includes unique tools like a “Chug” control for palm mute emphasis and a “Pick” enhancer that boosts upper-mid attack. There’s also a whistle filter and a dedicated lofi processor.
The interface gives you access to extensive pre- and post-processing tools, allowing DI signal refinement and full-mix tone shaping from within a single plugin. Oversampling goes up to 8x (although I’d like to see it go to eleven, ha!), and you also get handy features like a built-in tuner, click track, and output limiter.
Despite being in beta, Altar already feels polished. The amp and cabinet sections are clearly laid out, and the sound quality is impressive, especially considering this is a free project.
Altar is available as a 64-bit VST3 plugin for Windows. You can download it directly from the developer’s GitHub page. Since it’s open-source and released under GPL-3, you’re also free to modify or contribute to its development.
You’ll need a Windows-based DAW to run it for now, but it’s definitely one to keep an eye on if you’re looking for a modular amp sim that doesn’t cost a thing.
Download: Altar (Windows)
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Last Updated on November 22, 2025 by Tomislav Zlatic.



