9 Best Rawstyle Sample Packs

Industrial Strength Extreme Rawstyle
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Rawstyle is the loud, ugly cousin of Hardstyle that took on a life of its own. Distorted kicks that punch through walls, screeches that sound like a chainsaw being murdered, dark melodies, and aggressive vocals shouted by people who clearly aren’t having a calm Tuesday. It’s the sound of Defqon.1, Q-dance, and the kind of festival where 50,000 people are jumping in unison.

The thing about Rawstyle is that the production is genuinely hard. Crafting a proper Rawstyle kick from scratch can eat hours, even days, of studio time. Which is why a good sample pack is gold for this genre. This list pulls together 10 of the best Rawstyle sample packs on Loopmasters.

Most are by Singomakers because they basically own this lane, but IQ Samples and Industrial Strength also bring serious heat. Image credits go to Loopmasters & Splice.

1. Singomakers Rawstyle Force

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Singomakers Rawstyle Force

Starting with the most recent of the bunch. Rawstyle Force dropped in early 2024 and brings 1.51 GB of fresh 150 BPM content. The kicks are the headline here. 82 unique kicks all crafted from scratch, covering classic Rawstyle, mainstream hardcore, Zaag kicks, and gated kicks.

Inspiration-wise it’s pulling from Digital Punk, Radical Redemption, Endymion, Killshot, Krowdexx, Warface, Act Of Rage, Sub Sonik, and Rebelion. So basically the current Rawstyle scene’s heaviest hitters. You also get screeches, epic melodies, twisted vocals, drum shots, and Serum patches.

For me this is the one to grab if you want current sounds. It also covers xtra raw and uptempo because Rawstyle has been splitting into sub-styles. Don’t sleep on this pack if you produce in this genre seriously.

Pros: 82 hand-crafted kicks plus current sub-genre coverage. Cons: Smaller than some older Singomakers packs in total content.

2. Singomakers Rawstyle Monster

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Singomakers Rawstyle Monster

If you want bigger and meaner, Rawstyle Monster is the move. 1.89 GB at 160 BPM with the kind of content list that takes a while to fully explore. 126 raw kicks alone, including standard Rawstyle, gated, and unmastered versions so you can mix them yourself.

The pack draws from Angerfist, Digital Punk, Radical Redemption, Endymion, Warface, D-Sturb, and Act Of Rage. You also get melody loops, twisted vocal phrases, screeches, and 50 VST presets split between Serum and Massive. There’s a proper amount of variety in here.

I love that the kick selection alone is enough to keep most producers busy for months. Rawstyle is all about that kick, and Monster lives up to its name. Solid choice if you want range.

Pros: 126 raw kicks with both processed and unmastered versions. Cons: 160 BPM only, so it’s locked to that classic Rawstyle tempo.

3. Singomakers Rawstyle Sabbath

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Singomakers Rawstyle Sabbath

Themed around “Rawstyle Witches, Hardstyle Magicians, and Hard Dance Warlocks,” which is exactly the kind of over-the-top branding this genre runs on. Rawstyle Sabbath delivers 1.92 GB at 160 BPM with a darker, more wicked vibe than most of the Singomakers Rawstyle catalogue.

You get 334 one-shots spanning claps, crashes, distorted toks, gated kicks, hell kicks, raw kicks, screeches, and snares. Plus 101 melody loops with MIDI, 84 screech loops, vocal phrases, and 56 Serum presets. Inspiration draws from Angerfist, Digital Punk, Radical Redemption, Hard Driver, Zatox, and Sub Zero Project.

Personally I’d grab this if you want a pack with a specific dark mood. It also stretches into Frenchcore and Speedcore territory, which gives you more flexibility than just pure Rawstyle.

Pros: Dark themed sound with strong screech and melody content. Cons: The dark mood might not fit if you want lighter or more euphoric Rawstyle.

4. IQ Samples Rawstyle Madness

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IQ Samples Rawstyle Madness

A change of pace from the Singomakers run. IQ Samples brings Rawstyle Madness, a 1.38 GB pack at 160 BPM that’s specifically aimed at producers chasing festival placements. The marketing literally calls out Defqon.1, Qlimax, Qapital, Supremacy, Decibel, and Dominator as target festivals.

Inside you’ll find 79 mad screech loops, 63 epic melody loops with corresponding MIDI, 255 Rawstyle one-shots including punch kicks and reversed kicks, 27 NI Massive presets, and rap vocals with lyrics. Inspiration pulls from Digital Punk, Radical Redemption, E-Force, Rebelion, Sub Sonik, Warface, D-Sturb, and Act Of Rage.

I appreciate that this pack is unapologetically aimed at the labels that matter in this scene like End Of Line, Minus Is More, Nightbreed, Roughstate, and Theracords. Get this if you’re trying to break into that world.

Pros: Festival-focused sound with strong screech and melody content. Cons: Smaller pack overall compared to the bigger Singomakers libraries.

5. Singomakers Rawstyle Moombah

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Singomakers Rawstyle Moombah

This one’s the curveball of the list. Rawstyle Moombah fuses two pretty different worlds. The aggressive Rawstyle sound mashed up with 110 BPM Moombah rhythms. 1.48 GB of content at that slower dembow-style tempo, which you don’t see in Rawstyle very often.

You get 110 one-shots including kicks, claps, crashes, hats, and percussion, plus 192 drum loops and fills, music loops, bass loops, and 30 vocal loops. The whole thing’s built for producers who want to combine the punch of Rawstyle with that swung Moombahton groove.

What I love is that this pack lets you do something different. Most Rawstyle packs sit at 150-160 BPM and stay there. Get this one if you want to experiment or stand out from the crowd. It’s not for everyone, but it’s genuinely creative.

Pros: Unique 110 BPM fusion sound that nobody else really covers. Cons: Niche use case, won’t replace a standard Rawstyle pack.

6. Singomakers Rawstyle Destructor

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Singomakers Rawstyle Destructor

Rawstyle Destructor is one of the largest packs on this list. Over 1,800 individual elements packed into 2.04 GB, which is genuinely close to Singomakers’ Ultra Pack series in scope. If you want a single pack that covers basically everything, this is probably it.

Highlights include 40 unique Rawstyle kicks plus 40 processed versions, 49 Rawstyle Toks so you can build your own kicks, 134 vocal rhymes and phrases with lyrics (18+), 55 VST presets for Serum and Massive, and a massive selection of screeches, melodies, and FX. Inspired by Angerfist, Digital Punk, Radical Redemption, Hard Driver, Warface, D-Sturb, Zatox, and the usual heavy hitters.

For me this is the most complete Rawstyle library Singomakers has put out at a single price point. Don’t skip this one if you want one pack to rule them all.

Pros: Massive 1,800+ elements with kick construction tools. Cons: The size means it takes time to actually go through and find what you want.

7. Industrial Strength Extreme Rawstyle

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Industrial Strength Extreme Rawstyle

Switching to a different label. Industrial Strength is a legendary name in hard electronic music, and Extreme Rawstyle brings their grittier, harder approach to the genre. The whole pack runs at 155 BPM, which is the sweet spot between classic Rawstyle and uptempo.

You get 49 screech loops, 15 raw kicks, 24 kick loops, 31 kick fillers, 19 PsyTrance kick loops (an unusual addition that opens up creative crossover ideas), 37 melody loops, plus claps, hats, snares, vocals, and 12 Serum presets. Both wet and dry versions of the synth content too.

Personally, I love the addition of those PsyTrance kick loops because they push the pack beyond pure Rawstyle. It’s also 100% license-free, which Industrial Strength is known for. Get this if you want a slightly different angle from the Singomakers stuff.

Pros: Includes PsyTrance kick loops for creative crossover. License-free. Cons: Smaller library than the bigger Singomakers packs.

8. Singomakers Rawstyle Attack

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Singomakers Rawstyle Attack

Going back to Singomakers for Rawstyle Attack, sitting at 1.52 GB and 150 BPM. The notable thing here is that all the kicks were tested on Function-One club sound systems, which is the gear most Hardstyle festivals actually use. So you know they translate to a real club setup.

Inside you’ll find 120 screech synth loops, 60 dark melody loops, 160 one-shots including 40 Rawstyle kicks, drum loops, 20 rap vocals with wet and dry versions, 120 MIDI files, and 30 vocal shouts. Inspired by Digital Punk, E-Force, Warface, Radical Redemption, Endymion, Adaro, Ran-D, Sub Sonik, and Titan.

I’d say this pack works well for producers aiming at labels like Roughstate, Theracords, Minus Is More, and End Of Line. The Function-One testing thing is actually a real practical benefit because club translation is where most home producers fall short.

Pros: Kicks tested on Function-One club systems. Cons: Older release than some packs on this list, design is a bit dated.

10. Singomakers Rawstyle Till The End

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Singomakers Rawstyle Till The End

Closing out with another big one. Rawstyle Till The End brings 2.12 GB at 155 BPM, with 40 rap vocals (including both male and female plus lyrics), which is unusual since most Rawstyle vocal content is male shouts. There’s actual variety here.

Highlights include 100 screech loops (50 dry, 50 wet), 51 drum loops, 42 kick rolls, 83 melody loops with 69 MIDI, 222 one-shots, 66 VST patches for Serum and Massive, and 44 vocal shouts. Inspired by Angerfist, Digital Punk, E-Force, Warface, Radical Redemption, Endymion, Hard Driver, Kronos, D-Sturb, Act Of Rage, and Sub Zero Project.

Personally I love that female vocals are included. Most Rawstyle packs ignore that completely, and having both options gives you way more creative range. Solid finish to the list.

Pros: Includes male and female rap vocals with lyrics, plus huge sound library. Cons: Older pack, not all elements feel current to 2024-2025 Rawstyle.

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