Building tracks in FL Studio gets a whole lot easier when you’ve got the right sounds at your fingertips, and a well-curated sample pack can save you hours of digging or sound design before you even drop your first kick.
I’ve spent a lot of time auditioning libraries across pretty much every genre that lives inside FL, from main-room EDM and trap to dub techno, country, and cinematic vocals, and I noticed that the packs you actually keep coming back to share a few things in common: clean recordings, smart key and BPM labelling, and enough variety to spark ideas without being so bloated that you can’t find anything.
The Loopmasters catalogue, in my opinion, is one of the strongest places to source royalty-free material because every pack ships in standard WAV alongside REX2, MIDI, and sampler patches, all of which drop straight into FL Studio’s Browser without any fuss. Sure there is also Splice and some others for which I plan to make separate article.
I’d say the list below is a balanced mix that covers nearly every category an FL producer might touch, and I’ve tried to be honest about what each pack does well and where it might fall short.
Disclaimer: I picked these packs based on my impressions and feelings of the audio teaser, I didn’t purchase any of these, so keep that in mind. In my opinion, if pack is great, it will reflect in the teaser. Credit for images goes to Loopmasters.
1. HY2ROGEN EDM Fusion (EDM)

If your goal is festival-ready EDM with that big-room polish, this one from HY2ROGEN really delivers.
I love how the pack drags you straight into Tomorrowland-grade territory with 1.6GB+ of content across 1,027 files all locked at 128 BPM, covering bigroom, electro, progressive, groove house, future house, wobble house, and dirty house.
You get 74 bass loops, 50 drops, 80 lead loops, 100 melody loops, 220 drum hits, 130 MIDI files, and 90 REX2 loops, with everything delivered in both dry and wet versions so you can decide how much space and reverb you want in your mix.
Pros: the dry/wet exports are a huge time-saver, and the MIDI lets you swap in your own synths inside FL Studio. Cons: if you’re not making EDM in that festival-bigroom lane, a lot of the drops will feel a bit too aggressive for your taste.
2. Loopmasters Deep Trap (Trap)

Deep Trap takes the genre somewhere a little more soulful, blending old-school deep house and RnB chord influences with modern trap drums, and I think that’s exactly what makes it stand out.
The pack ships with 1.58GB of content and 458 individual 24-bit samples at 130 BPM, including 323 loops, 91 music loops covering leads, keys, organs, pads, synths and arps, 109 drum loops, 25 vocal loops, 20 bass loops, plus 135 one-shots and 52 sampler patches for NNXT, Halion, Kontakt, EXS24 and SFZ.
Every musical element is key-labelled, which makes dropping things into FL Studio’s piano roll painless. For me, the standout is the chopped vocal loops, since they instantly add a layer of soul that most trap packs miss.
Pros: beautifully musical, very versatile beyond trap. Cons: at 130 BPM throughout, you’ll need to time-stretch if you want to use it for anything outside the genre.
3. Chill House & Garage (House)

Loopmasters’ Chill House & Garage is a fresh take on underground sounds with that modern downtempo twist, and I’d recommend it for anyone chasing the laid-back poolside energy.
Inside you get 1.34GB of content with 480 24-bit WAV files, broken down into 294 loops, 49 bass loops, 171 drum loops, 67 music loops with leads, strings, chords, plucks, keys, pads, piano and music boxes, plus 186 one-shots, 6 Massive presets, 79 MIDI files, 297 REX2 files and 107 sampler patches.
I appreciate how the music loops cover a really diverse instrument palette, since most chill packs lean heavy on pads alone.
Pros: the MIDI inclusion makes it incredibly flexible, and the included Massive presets are a nice bonus. Cons: you’ll want Massive installed to get the most out of the synth presets, although the WAVs and MIDI alone are more than enough to build full tracks.
4. Loopmasters Drum & Bass Liquidism (Drum & Bass)

For those of you producing liquid DnB in FL Studio, Liquidism is honestly hard to beat.
It contains 953MB of content with 455 24-bit WAV files at 174 BPM, which is the sweet spot for liquid, and it’ll also work at half-tempo for hip hop or chillout.
You get 256 loops including 46 bass loops, 132 drum loops, 70 music loops with leads, strings, piano, synths, vocals, arps, chords and horns, plus 197 one-hits, 5 Multi-Sampled Synths, 260 REX2 loops, 101 MIDI files, 5 Massive presets, and 85 sampler patches.
The brooding basslines and serene musical elements have that Lenzman-meets-Blu Mar Ten vibe that’s really hard to find elsewhere.
Pros: the half-tempo flexibility makes the pack genuinely versatile, and the MIDI files are a huge help. Cons: if you want neurofunk-style aggression, this isn’t the right pack since it leans entirely on the deep, soulful side of DnB.
5. Singomakers EDM Power Pack Vol. 3 (EDM 2)

Produced by REZONE, this Singomakers Mega Pack is built for EDM, big room, electro house and progressive house, and the artist quality really shows.
You get 1.27GB of 24-bit WAV samples including 200 one-shots, 70 synth loops, 40 bass loops, 50 drum loops, 20 drum fills, 110 MIDI files, 200 REX files, 60 sound FX, 20 vocal shouts, 10 NI Massive patches and 10 Spire patches.
I realized that the variety of basses (analog, FM and digital) gives you a really wide tonal palette to play with, and the vocal shouts are perfect for hyping up drops.
Pros: the Massive and Spire presets are genuinely usable rather than throwaway, and Re-Zone’s track record means the sounds have actual radio-ready polish. Cons: the pack is from 2014 so a few of the leads have that more dated bigroom flavour, although honestly that festival sound has come back around.
6. Frontline Producer Pop Piano (Piano)

I have to say, real piano performances are something most synth-heavy packs completely lack, and that’s exactly where Frontline Producer Pop Piano shines.
Performed by Mike Taylor, this pack delivers 2.85GB of content with 400 24-bit WAV loops, split into 100 loops at 90 BPM, 100 at 100 BPM, 100 at 110 BPM, 100 at 120 BPM, plus 400 MIDI files and 438 REX2 loops.
Everything is key-labelled and provided in a mix of major and minor scales, which makes it ideal for indie, pop, hip hop, house and EDM productions.
The included MIDI lets you reprogram the parts inside FL Studio’s piano roll if you want to swap to a Rhodes or felt-piano patch.
Pros: the MIDI flexibility is genuinely powerful for songwriting, and the performances feel real because they actually are. Cons: if you wanted dramatic cinematic piano, this leans more towards modern Adele-style pop, so it’s not the right pick for trailer music.
7. Loopmasters Berlin Dub Techno (Techno)

Berlin Dub Techno captures that brooding, deep, late-night German vibe that’s so hard to nail with stock plugins, and I’d say it’s a serious go-to for anyone making techno, tech house or dub-influenced house.
Inside you get 764MB of content with 372 24-bit WAV samples at 125 BPM, including 193 loops with 33 bass loops, 81 drum loops, 7 FX loops, 40 music loops covering plucks, chords, strings, stabs, organs and pads, plus 32 vocal loops, 179 one-shots, 196 REX files, 95 sampler patches, 25 MIDI bass loops and 16 MIDI synth loops.
Drums come divided into hats, kicks, percs, snares, tops and full loops, which is exactly the layered approach you need for that Berlin style.
Pros: the atmospheric vocals and synthetic textures give you tons of mood right out of the box. Cons: if you want hard or industrial techno, this pack leans dub and minimal, so it might feel a little too restrained.
8. Loopmasters Atmospheric Vinyl Breaks (Hip Hop)

Produced by Chemo, the UK’s premier break producer, this pack basically saves you years of crate-digging.
You get 938MB of content spanning 30 full break mixes, 28 drum part loops, 12 atmosphere loops, 15 dusty FX loops, 175 drum hits, 5 bass hits, 6 FX, plus 35 ready-to-play drum kit patches for Kontakt, Halion, SFZ, EXS24 and Reason NNXT, all between 78-132 BPM.
In Chemo’s words the drums are crusted, tainted, mangled, taped and injected with secret psychedelic compounds, and that pretty much describes the vibe. The crackling vinyl layers, spacey atmospheres and ambient samples really do bring something fresh to your beats.
Pros: every break has its own kit so you can chop and rebuild, plus they all sit beautifully in hip hop, trip hop, trap, breakbeat and chillout productions. Cons: the lo-fi character is heavy, so if you want squeaky-clean drums for modern trap, you’ll need to layer with cleaner kicks.
9. Singomakers Astral Psytrance (Psytrance / GOA)

For me, this pack pretty much defined the sound of modern psy when it dropped, and it held the #1 spot on Loopmasters bestsellers for three months in a row.
You get 1.73GB at 138 BPM with 160 one-shots, 50 powerful bass loops, 60 synth loops, 80 drum loops, 40 ethnic loops with live-recorded flute, Tibetan bells, shakers and percussion, 42 mantra vocals, 50 fills and build-ups, 22 gated vocal loops, 110 MIDI files, 353 REX2 files, 13 sampler patches, 110 SFX and 50 synth fills.
The pack is inspired by Astrix, Astral Projection, Shpongle, Vini Vici and Infected Mushroom and works for full-on, Goa, progressive psy, cinematic and psystep.
Pros: the live-recorded ethnic instruments and mantra vocals add genuine character that synthesized stuff just can’t fake. Cons: the BPM is locked at 138, so if you want darker forest-style psy at 145+ you’ll have to time-stretch.
10. Freaky Loops Epica 2: Cinematic Vocals & Beds (Epic Vocals)

If your tracks need that emotional, otherworldly cinematic touch, Epica 2 is one of those packs that I keep reaching for.
It contains 2.62GB of unique and hypnotic material with 180 loops at 90-170 BPM and 175 one-shots, broken down into 45 atmospheres (25 dark and deep, 20 melodic and magical), 14 beds and abstract loops, 20 emotional trailer melodies, 25 pads, 51 phrases (25 dry/26 wet), 15 pianos, 10 war chants, 11 breaths, 20 chants and screams, 20 chords, 14 FX, 20 spoken and 90 words.
Everything is key and tempo-labelled, which makes it really easy to drop into your FL projects.
Pros: the dark/deep vs melodic/magical organization is super smart, and the war chants and breaths add textures you genuinely won’t find anywhere else. Cons: the wide BPM range from 90 to 170 means you’ll need to do some time-stretching if you want everything to lock to a single tempo.
11. RV Samplepacks Future Funk & Soul 2 (Funk)

I love how this one captures that Kaytranada / Pomo / Pat Lok soulful aesthetic.
Recorded with an original Rhodes Mark 1, Fender Strat and Tele, Roland Juno 106 and Korg Minilogue, the pack delivers 963MB with 478 24-bit WAV files at 100-120 BPM.
You get 270 loops including 40 synth loops, 37 kick loops, 33 top loops, 30 full drum loops, 27 synth bass loops, 20 Rhodes loops, 15 electric guitar loops, 12 electric bass loops, plus 19 perc loops, 12 FX loops, 9 hat loops, 9 drum part loops, 4 chord loops and 3 pad loops.
There are 208 one-shots, 272 REX2 files and 68 sampler patches rounding it out.
Pros: real instruments give the pack a humanistic warmth that synthesized funk packs always miss. Cons: if you want strict 80s disco purity, this leans more into the modern future-funk territory, so it’s a question of taste.
12. Loopmasters VIBES Vol 4 – Outlaw Country (Country)

For something completely different in your FL toolkit, this country pack is genuinely one of the most ambitious sample collections out there.
Inspired by Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard, it gives you 5.90GB of content with 991 WAV loops plus an additional 1,199 REX2 loops at 80-135 BPM, covering 40 fully multi-tracked construction kits.
You’ll find 137 drum kit loops, 137 drum bus loops, 111 fiddle loops, 130 electric bass loops, 131 steel guitar loops, 63 acoustic bass loops, 133 piano loops, 137 electric guitar loops and 12 dobro loops, all played by top session musicians.
Every musical element is key-labelled.
Pros: the multi-tracked stems mean you can rebuild whole arrangements in FL Studio, and the fiddle and dobro loops are truly rare to find royalty-free. Cons: the genre niche is tight, although the loops can absolutely be filtered, pitched and sampled into hip hop and country-trap productions.
13. Loopmasters Ultimate Vocals (Various Vocals)

Ultimate Vocals is a curated greatest-hits collection of vocal samples from the entire Loopmasters back catalogue, and for me, that’s exactly why it’s so useful.
You get over 3GB of samples and roughly 2,000 individual 24-bit samples between 60-172 BPM, covering loops, phrases, hooks and one-shots from Marshall Jefferson, Robert Owens, Horse Man and many more.
The collection spans Blues vocals, drum and bass phrases, dub vocals, funk vocal loops, ghetto funk and break vocals, hip hop and electro vocals, house vocals, trap vocals, with 19 sampler patches for NNXT, Halion, SFZ, Kontakt and EXS24.
Pros: the genre and tempo range is massive, so this works as a one-stop vocal toolbox for nearly any FL Studio production you might tackle. Cons: because it’s a compilation, the styles are inconsistent across the pack, which means you might dig through quite a few folders before landing on the perfect vocal for your track.
14. Loopmasters Groove Tech (Tech House)

Groove Tech was produced by Andy Lee of Barcoda and captures what was originally called the New Sound of Ibiza, fusing deep and tech house, techno, disco and jackin elements.
It comes loaded with that slightly jackin and swung-out groove that works in main rooms and back rooms equally well.
Inspired by huge tracks from Joris Voorn, Audiojack, Mendo, Jay Lumen, Pleasurekraft, Butch, Mark Broom and Riva Starr, the pack delivers a versatile palette of drum loops, bass loops, percussion-heavy elements, synth stabs, organ riffs, vocal cuts, plus REX2 loops and sampler patches for Kontakt, Halion, NNXT and EXS24.
Pros: the swung-out grooves sit beautifully in FL Studio’s playlist, and the percussive variety means your tech house drums never sound generic. Cons: the pack is older so it doesn’t include MIDI files, which is something newer Loopmasters releases tend to ship with as standard now.
15. DABRO Music Avenax – Vocal Acapellas (Pop Vocals)

This one features the smooth, seductive voice of Alyona Avenax, who’s worked with labels like Simplify Recordings, Spring Tube and Black Hole.
The pack delivers 968MB of content with 11 full dry songs including verses, chorus and backing vocal stems, plus over 100 adlib one-shots and phrases, all at 90-140 BPM.
You also get 11 text lyric sheets and 11 MIDI chord progressions corresponding to each track, which is a really thoughtful touch when you want to recreate or transpose the harmony.
The pack works for house, rock, dubstep, hip hop, trap, RnB and grime.
Pros: complete songs with stems give you maximum flexibility, and the MIDI chords plus lyrics make rebuilding tracks effortless. Cons: the vocals all come from one singer, so the tonal variety is limited compared to multi-vocalist packs.
16. TONE KITCHN Drill (Drill)

Tone Kitchn’s debut Drill pack is a heavyweight introduction to their production ethos and brings everything you need for the genre in a tight, focused package.
You get 244MB of 24-bit content at 140-148 BPM including 25 synth loops, 19 full drum loops, 19 top drum loops, 18 bass 808 loops, 17 hat loops, 9 keys loops, 5 percussion loops, 4 vocal FX loops, 2 pad loops, 1 string loop and 1 mallet loop, plus 21 drum hits, 12 percussion hits, 7 bass hits, 5 synth hits, 5 vocals and 19 soft sampler patches for Kontakt, EXS24, NNXT and SFZ.
The cold pianos, trippy strings and dope vocal FX give a unique angle that pushes beyond standard drill clichés.
Pros: the focused approach means everything in the pack is useful and nothing feels like filler. Cons: at 244MB it’s a smaller library compared to many of the others on this list, so don’t expect endless variety.
17. Loopmasters House Acapellas Vol. 2 (House Vocals)

Produced and written by Andy Lee with some of the best session vocalists in the dance scene, this pack picks up where Vol 1 left off and brings serious quality.
The collection comes in at 857MB and 155 24-bit WAV samples at 44.1kHz, including 8 stems from Feeling Love, 20 stems from Don’t Make Me Wait, 8 stems from Saturdays, 7 stems from Feel It In Your Soul, 14 stems from Fabulous, 3 spoken word male speeches and 95 male and female short phrases, plus 55 REX2 files and 2 sampler patches.
You get verses, bridges, choruses, harmony parts and single-word phrases, perfect for classic house, deep house, tech house and garage.
Pros: real session-vocalist quality with full song stems gives you that proper club-track feel. Cons: with five featured songs the pack is fairly focused, so the lyrical content might not match every concept you have in mind.
18. Loopmasters Nu School Deep House (Deep House)

Nu School Deep House from Andy Lee captures that pivotal moment when artists like Jamie Jones, Maceo Plex, Maya Jane Coles, Tale Of Us, Julio Bashmore and Eats Everything were redefining deep house with influences from classic house, nu disco, techno and Berlin deep tech.
The pack ships with over 1GB of 24-bit quality samples including 154 bass loops, 300 drum loops, 65 music loops, 54 vocal loops, 24 FX shots, 438 drum hits, 7 multi-sampled synth instruments and 7 multi-sampled bass instruments.
Pros: the multi-sampled instruments are genuinely playable inside FL Studio’s sampler, which gives you melodic flexibility beyond the loops, and the drum hit count is huge. Cons: the pack reflects the Hot Creations / Crosstown Rebels era of around 2013, so the aesthetic might feel slightly throwback if you’re chasing the very latest deep house sound.
19. Loopmasters Swedish House (House)

The Swedish House pack from Andy Lee draws on the sound that inspired Avicii, Axwell, Sebastian Ingrosso, Steve Angello, Alesso, Pryda and Tim Berg, merging progressive, electro, tech and cutting-edge house with that pristine main-room quality.
You get a hefty 1.2GB and 1,130 pristine 24-bit samples, with 670 loops and 460 one-shot samples, plus 37 ready-to-play patches for Reason NNXT, Halion, Kontakt, EXS and SFZ compatible soft samplers.
Pros: the sample count alone makes this one of the most generous packs on this list, and the polished mainroom production translates beautifully into FL Studio’s mixer. Cons: the Swedish House sound is heavily associated with the early-2010s era, so depending on your taste you might find some of the supersaws and pluck leads a bit nostalgic.
20. SHARP Female Pop Vocals (Female Pop Vocals)

Closing out the list, SHARP’s Female Pop Vocals delivers commercial-grade female vocal content recorded by their top vocalist Lokka.
The pack includes 185 files and 417MB unpacked at 24-bit WAV quality between 100-126 BPM, broken into 158 loops including 5 bass loops, 22 drum loops, 18 instrumental loops with synths, pianos and plucks, 6 music loops, 51 vocal chop FX loops, 28 dry vocal loops, 28 wet vocal loops, plus 19 one-shots and 8 MIDI loops.
You get vocal acapellas in dry and wet versions, FX vocal chops for extra texture, and full drums, basslines, melodies and one-shots so the pack works as a complete pop construction toolkit.
Pros: the dry/wet pairing for vocals saves a lot of mixing time, and the included instrumentals mean you can build entire pop tracks without leaving the pack. Cons: the pack contains some explicit lyrics, so if you’re producing radio-edit pop or content for younger audiences, you’ll need to audition carefully before committing.

Hello, I’m Viliam, I started this audio plugin focused blog to keep you updated on the latest trends, news and everything plugin related. I’ll put the most emphasis on the topics covering best VST, AU and AAX plugins. If you find some great plugin suggestions for us to include on our site, feel free to let me know, so I can take a look!
