Recently, I covered Drox II in another article, where I lamented the fact that it was a Max for Live device and thus an Ableton Live exclusive plugin. Well, I’ve got no more reasons to stay salty, because the plugin is now Windows compatible in VST format. Great news!
Drox II is a glitch and stutter tool perfect for experimental sounds, effects, beats, and contorted melodies, drawing inspiration from the mildly annoying CD era where skips and jumps blurted from your budget Discman as soon as you started walking.
Infuse stale tracks with some movement, make a groove into an IDM nightmare, or a boring pad into a complex moving entity.
The plugin offers a relatively simple layout with four separate sections spanning left to right: Dropouts, Jumps, a larger Stutter engine, and a final utility section.
Dropouts and Jumps are controlled by their own range, density, and size buttons. Density controls the frequency, Size controls duration, while Depth controls the overall volume change for the dropout section.
While Density determines the rate of read head jumps, Size controls how long playback continues from the new position before returning to the main playback head, and Range controls how far the tape head can jump in the Jumps section.
These two modes can be operated in either Hz or Tempo synced configurations, giving you additional control when crafting a groove and fitting it into a project.
The Stutter part of the plugin has an upper and a lower panel of controls.
In the upper panel, there is a window control that influences the envelope of each repeat as well as density, size, and repetition parameters, plus a master control for randomisation.
The bottom panel features pitch and pitch spread parameters, a reverse function, an adjustable distortion module, and a flexible state-variable filter that can behave in various ways depending on the randomization setting.
Finally, the last section of Drox II features a handy mix control, an output knob for gain staging, and a playback control that allows you to reverse everything.
This plugin is relatively simple on the surface, but has a lot of cool possibilities for adding unorthodox elements to a mix or as a sound design tool, for instance.
Definitely worth checking out if you like sonic exploration and plugins where you don’t really know what to expect.
Download: Drox II (FREE – Now available for both macOS and Windows)
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Last Updated on November 10, 2025 by Tomislav Zlatic.



