Last week, we covered the free FedDSP Morso distortion plugin. This was the first installment of a series of FedDSP plugins that the developer will be releasing for free on a weekly basis. They are keeping their word with this week’s new offering – Snapper.
Snapper is a compression-and-saturation tool inspired by an OTA (operational transconductance amplifier) circuit. This sort of compressor is known for a squashy character with a bit of noise and grit to boot.
The plugin interface looks like a standard guitar pedal with three adjustable knobs: Squash, Snap, and Level.
- Squash: Controls the amount of compression with automatic makeup gain.
- Snap: Adjust the variable linked attack/release time for transient shaping. Let the transients through for a pokey, aggressive sound or compress them to flatten the signal and bring out the body. This is nice for parallel compression.
- Level: Boosts or cuts the volume after the saturation stage.
Like Morso, Snapper boasts some advanced features that can be very useful.
Dedicated input and output sliders to help with gain-staging the plugin. Operation in stereo, mono, or dual mono modes for more versatility, polarity switch, sample delay for added stereo width, a limiter, and a filter that can be applied before or after processing.
The limiter has two separate modes when engaged: Safe and Aggro. Safe is meant to be transparent and forgiving, while Aggro digs deeper into the material and reacts more quickly to transients.
The filter stage covers anything from 20Hz to 20.000Khz, and can make a huge difference to how the plugin operates – especially when put before or after the processing.
According to the developer, Snapper is CPU-efficient and zero-latency. This means that the plugin works both for live, tracking, and mixing purposes.
The layout of Snapper prioritizes an effective workflow where the two main parameters, Squash and Snap, in combination with the built-in saturation does most of the heavy lifting. The advanced features let you tailor the sound further if needed.
I think the filter stage, as well as dual mono operation and sample delay function, takes it from a bread-and-butter type of unit to something that can be used creatively for sound design as well. Try pushing things all the way and see what happens.
If you use a DAW that has native delta-monitoring, this can get even more fun. If you’re in the market for tone-shaping plugins, Plugin Boutique currently offers their DriveMod plugin for free (usually $49), by the way!
Download: Snapper (FREE until March 24th)
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Last Updated on March 18, 2026 by Tomislav Zlatic.



