EDM is one of those genres that means something different to almost everyone. For some it’s mainstage festival anthems with hands in the air drops. For others it’s future rave, big room, electro, progressive, or that radio-friendly Pop EDM crossover. The umbrella stretches wide.
This list pulls together packs that cover that whole range. Some lean toward festival Tomorrowland-style energy, others sit in the euphoric peak-time space, and a few specialize in specific elements like chords, basslines, or synth shots. Whether you’re chasing mainstage, future rave, big room, electro, progressive house, or anthem EDM sounds, there’s something here that fits.
Across these 13 packs you’ll find producers and inspiration that span the genre’s biggest names. Singomakers, Big Fish Audio, Loopmasters, and HY2ROGEN each have multiple entries, with Industrial Strength’s TD Audio, Freaky Loops, and Zenhiser rounding out the list.
Inspiration touches David Guetta, Hardwell, Tiesto, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike, W&W, Avicii, Martin Garrix, Nicky Romero, Axwell, Alesso, Swedish House Mafia, Deadmau5, Kaskade, Diplo, Major Lazer, Don Diablo, Oliver Heldens, Zedd, and Tchami, plus labels like Spinnin, Revealed, Axtone, Size, Protocol, OWSLA, Musical Freedom, Smash The House, Refune, Ultra, and Armada.
Everything here is 100% royalty-free, so anything you make with these can be released without licensing worries. Image credits go to Loopmasters & Splice.
1. Singomakers EDM Ultra Pack 6
Six volumes deep into one of Loopmasters’ bestselling EDM series, Singomakers know exactly what mainstage producers need. 2.76GB at 130 BPM worth of modern and classic EDM ranging from peak-time festival sounds to future rave styles.
What I love about this pack is the artist and label inspiration list. We’re talking Spinnin, Revealed, Axtone, Size, Protocol, Musical Freedom, Smash The House, Armada, plus artists like David Guetta, Hardwell, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike, Tiesto, W&W, and Ummet Ozcan. That’s the festival lineup of the decade.
For me the standout is the loop count. 127 drop synth and bass loops, 127 drum loops, 109 melody loops is genuinely massive, and you also get 212 MIDI files for total control over the harmonic content.
The construction kit content adds another layer of depth. 6 multi kits with full mixes and an Ableton Live mix included means you can drop a complete idea into your DAW and start tweaking from there.
I appreciate the studio gear used here. Avalon VT 747, Manley Passive EQ, UAD-2, LA2A compressor, Moog Voyager, Virus TI, Korg MS2000, all top-tier hardware that you can hear in the polish.
Pros: Massive content scale with 159 Serum presets, MIDI included, and serious studio gear behind it. Cons: The single 130 BPM tempo limits flexibility for slower or faster genres without time-stretching.
2. Big Fish Audio GLOW: EDM

If you want the iconic sounds of artists like Deadmau5, Kaskade, and David Guetta, GLOW: EDM is built around exactly that. 50 construction kits packed with synths, deep basses, pianos, and FX transitions for creating EDM House music with a Pop flare.
What I love about this pack is the construction kit format. Every kit has a full demo mix plus corresponding files for each instrument, so you can pull the elements apart and rebuild however you want.
For me the standout is the drum stem approach. The ‘Drum Tracks’ folder gives you stems for individual drum elements, while ‘Drum Hits’ provides the one-shots for building beats from scratch.
The MIDI inclusion also matters here. Most of the melodic elements come with MIDI files, which means full control over the harmonic content rather than being locked into the audio loops as recorded.
I’d say the format flexibility is a real strength. The pack ships in Apple Loops, Acidized WAV, and REX files, which makes it usable in virtually any DAW or hardware setup on the market.
Pros: Strong construction kit format with stems, drum hits, and MIDI included plus multi-format compatibility. Cons: The Pop EDM lean might not suit producers chasing harder festival or future rave sounds.
3. Loopmasters Euphoric EDM

Peak-time EDM is its own art form. This Loopmasters pack delivers 1.70GB and 619 WAV files built around floor-filling sounds with epic synth leads, uplifting melodies, syncopated basslines, and enormous drops.
What I love about this pack is the breadth of loop content. You get 376 loops broken into 24 bass, 30 drop, 24 drum fills, 29 hat, 7 kick, 16 ride, 11 tom, 74 top, 42 FX, 93 music, and vocal loops, which covers basically everything a peak-time track needs.
For me the standout is the ‘Kicks in Key’ approach. These give you pitch-perfect beats that sit harmonically with your basslines, which sounds basic but is genuinely something most packs skip.
The drum kit inclusion also stands out. 5 pre-made drum kits with over 100 individual hits ready and patched in your favorite samplers means you can fire up a session and start building immediately.
I appreciate the cross-genre versatility. The pack works for EDM, Techno, House, Trance, and Hard Trance, with a range of major keys, so it fits multiple production contexts.
Pros: Comprehensive loop and one-shot content with the rare ‘Kicks in Key’ feature for harmonic coherence. Cons: No vocal phrase content, so you’ll need to source those separately for vocal-led tracks.
4. HY2ROGEN EDM Fusion

Festival inspiration runs through every part of this pack. 1.6GB+ of anthem materials drawing from the latest Tomorrowland, Creamfields, Mysteryland, and Ostend lineups.
What I love about this pack is the multi-genre coverage. EDM Fusion hits bigroom, electro, progressive, groove house, future house and bounce, wobble house, and dirty house, so you’re not pigeonholed into one specific sound.
For me the standout is the dynamic range of the bass content. The pack includes headroom-eating tonal kicks, big synths, skull-crushing drums, alongside silky piano riffs and groovy and wobble basslines.
The folder organization also helps with workflow. 10 main folders covering bass loops, drops, drum hits, fills, effects, lead loops, melody loops, percussion loops, top loops, and vocals means everything is exactly where you’d expect it.
I have to say the radio-friendly melodies and progressive-melodic leaders give the pack a versatility that goes beyond pure festival anthems. You can pull tracks toward more melodic territory without leaving the pack.
Pros: Multi-genre coverage with strong festival inspiration and well-organized folder structure. Cons: No MIDI files mentioned, so harmonic content is locked to the audio loops.
5. Loopmasters EDM Chords

Sometimes you just need killer chord progressions, and that’s exactly what this pack does. 1GB of euphoric chord sequences in C Minor, F Minor, and A Minor at 126, 128, and 130 BPM, all produced by Andy Lee, Loopmasters’ number one selling producer.
What I love about this pack is the laser focus. 103 chord progression loops at 126 BPM, 100 at 128 BPM, and 99 at 130 BPM, plus 302 Rex 2 files, all dedicated to one job: providing instant hooks for your tracks.
For me the standout is the variation system. Most chord progression loops come with filtered and modulated variations, which means you can build up tension across different sections without leaving the pack.
The artist inspiration list is also seriously strong. Avicii, Thomas Gold, Tim Mason, Pryda, Axwell, Firebeatz, and Nicky Romero are the touchstones, and the chords genuinely capture that anthemic peak-time feel.
I appreciate that this works across Swedish, Progressive, EDM, and Electro house styles. It’s not just an EDM pack, it’s a chord progression toolkit for multiple peak-time genres.
Pros: Hyper-focused chord content with multiple variations and clear key/tempo organization. Cons: Only chord content, so you’ll need a complete other pack for drums, bass, and FX.
6. Singomakers Incognet Bassline EDM

Ghost producers are the secret weapon of EDM, and Incognet is one of the most reputable in the game. His samples have been used in tracks by Oliver Heldens, Moguai, Thomas Gold, Kura, Kryder, Moska, Merk & Kremont, and David Tort, with ghost-produced tracks on Spinnin, Protocol, Revealed, and Heldeep.
What I love about this pack is the artist series authenticity. 550MB at 124-128 BPM of essential sounds from a producer whose work is literally on the charts under other people’s names.
For me the standout is the bass content. 30 bass loops specifically built for the bassline EDM sound, which is rare for a focused pack at this size.
The drum and percussion content is also dialed in. 15 top drum loops, 10 break beats, 30 drum fills, plus 45 one-shots broken into 10 claps, 10 kicks, and 25 music cuts.
I’d say the vocal inclusion adds real character. 19 vocal loops and 19 vocal shouts give you DJ-friendly hookiness and crowd-rallying energy, which is exactly what mainstage tracks need.
Pros: Authentic ghost-producer credibility with focused bass and vocal content from a chart-topping source. Cons: Smaller 550MB size means it works best as a focused supplement rather than a primary library.
7. Big Fish Audio Illuminate: EDM Construction Kits

Drawing inspiration from the titans of the EDM scene, Illuminate ships with 30 meticulously crafted construction kits designed to streamline electrifying EDM tracks. The dynamic sonic palette covers pulsating basslines, sub drops, euphoric synths, atmospheric pads, and dynamic transition FX.
What I love about this pack is how each kit is structured. Every construction kit comes equipped with individual files for instruments, alongside drum tracks and drum hits folders, which means you can pull apart and rebuild any element.
For me the standout is the drum stem approach. The drum tracks folder gives you stems for every drum element, while the drum hits folder offers versatile one-shots for precise drum manipulation.
The atmospheric and transitional content also matters here. Atmospheric pads and dynamic transition FX give you the build-up and breakdown elements that separate good EDM tracks from generic ones.
I have to say the pack works for both seasoned EDM veterans and beginners. The construction kit format means you can drop in a complete idea and start producing immediately, but the individual files give you full control if you want to dig deeper.
Pros: Strong construction kit format with full instrument files plus drum stems and dynamic transition FX. Cons: Smaller 30 kits compared to other construction-style packs in the genre.
8. Loopmasters Essential EDM

Re-Zone is the secret weapon behind multiple Loopmasters EDM packs, and this one is a flagship. 995MB at 126 BPM of hard-hitting house and electronic anthems primed for the Main Room.
What I love about this pack is the inspiration list. Sander Van Doorn, Nicky Romero, Hard Rock Sofa, Hardwell, Alesso, R3hab, Swedish House Mafia, Avicii, Thomas Gold, and Axwell alongside labels like Spinnin Records, Axtone, Size Records, Refune, Revealed Records, and Wall Recordings.
For me the standout is the kick approach. The drum loops use intelligent Hi-Pass filtering on the kicks, which means you can drop in any of the included 20 fat one-shot kicks and tune them to fit the bass for maximum harmonic blending.
The multi-sampled instruments are also a real strength. 10 bass multi-sampled instruments and 10 lead multi-sampled instruments mean you can play melodies and basslines as actual playable instruments rather than just fixed loops.
I appreciate the studio gear behind these sounds. Re-Zone used the Avalon VT 747 sp and Manley Passive EQ to squeeze every nuance out of each loop and one-shot, plus you get 10 Native Instruments Massive presets included.
Pros: Excellent kick filtering approach with multi-sampled instruments and Massive presets included. Cons: Single tempo at 126 BPM and 2014-era reference points may feel slightly dated for current trends.
9. Industrial Strength TD Audio Universal EDM

TD Audio is Industrial Strength’s EDM imprint, and they’ve built this pack around festival spirit. 2.01GB of construction kits, loops, FX, and samples designed for modern EDM production and remixes.
What I love about this pack is the kit approach. 7 construction kits with full stems for each kit means you can easily combine them or rework them into something brand new.
For me the standout is the bonus content. The 50 one-shots in the Bonus Folder are split into Bumbo, Hats, Percussion, and Synths, giving you sharp and clean elements to layer with the kits.
The sheer variety of melody content adds another layer. 61 melody loops, 30 full drum loops, 40 drum loops, 21 FX, plus 46 MIDI files cover basically every musical moment in a track.
I’d say the preset inclusion is genuinely useful. 6 Serum presets, 1 Massive preset, 3 Spire presets, plus Sylenth1 presets means you can extend the sounds with your own playing rather than being stuck with audio.
Pros: Construction kit format with full stems, multi-synth presets, and tempo plus key-labeled audio. Cons: Only 7 kits is on the lower side for a 2GB pack, so the depth-per-kit matters more than breadth.
10. Freaky Loops EDM World

Locked at 128 BPM with 1.13GB spread across 377 loops and samples plus 40 MIDI files, EDM World is a focused tempo workhorse for mainstage production.
What I love about this pack is the loops folder breakdown. 110 drum loops, 70 bass loops, 35 synth and chord loops, 30 combi loops, 30 drop lead loops, 15 EDM fills, and 15 FX loops cover essentially every musical element you need.
For me the standout is the bonus folder inclusion. 22 extra loops and samples sit on top of the main content, plus 50 killer FX hits in the one-shots folder give you serious transitional power.
The MIDI breakdown is also well thought out. 40 MIDI files split into 12 bass, 17 drop lead, and 11 synth and chord means you can rework the harmonic content however you want.
I appreciate the inspiration kit. 6 stems plus 1 full mix give you a complete reference track to study and learn from, which is rare for a sample pack at this price point.
Pros: Strong loop count and well-organized MIDI breakdown with a useful inspiration kit. Cons: Locked at 128 BPM means time-stretching is required for any other tempo.
11. Zenhiser EDM Attack

Multiple styles within the EDM realm sit comfortably in this 1.1GB Zenhiser pack. 285 total samples across 40 kits of dirty leads, pounding basslines, clever hooks, and menacing synths.
What I love about this pack is the kit structure. Each EDM kit includes separate basslines, multiple drum beats, an FX loop, and two variations of synth loops, plus a full loop so you can hear how everything fits together.
For me the standout is the cross-genre versatility. The pack works for EDM, Future House, Bass House, Electro House, and Progressive Trance, which means it’s not locked to one specific subgenre.
The key-labeling matters here. Every melodic loop is key labelled and all samples include BPM in the file name, which makes browsing and integration significantly faster.
I’d say the breadth-over-depth approach works well. 40 kits covering different EDM styles gives you variety to pull from, even if no single style gets exhaustive coverage.
Pros: Strong kit-based structure with cross-genre versatility and clear key plus BPM labeling. Cons: Only 285 samples means smaller raw count than some competitors despite covering 40 kits.
12. HY2ROGEN EDM

The original HY2ROGEN EDM pack and one of their best releases to date. 1.6GB+ of pure EDM, electro, and progressive house sounds built for floor-destroying energy.
What I love about this pack is the dance floor focus. You get fresh hooks, dance floor destroying drops, bigroom lush chords and melodies, skull-crushing complete drum loops, infected basslines, complementing effects, insane sweeps, risers and fills, plus perfect top loops.
For me the standout is the breakdown content. Bigroom breakdown melodies and drop and go fills give you the transitional moments that make EDM tracks actually move from build to drop.
The folder organization keeps things accessible. 8 folders covering bass loops, builds and fills, drum hits, drum loops, FX hits and sweeps, hooks and drops, melody loops, and top loops means everything is exactly where you need it.
I have to say the sound design here genuinely captures the bigroom and progressive house aesthetic. Earth shaking monster kicks, electric basslines, gentle and bigroom breakdown melodies all hit with the kind of polish you’d expect from a label-quality release.
Pros: Comprehensive content focused on dance floor destruction with strong build and drop elements. Cons: This is the original volume so the references may feel slightly dated compared to current EDM trends.
13. HY2ROGEN 1000 EDM Synth Shots

Closing out with something focused and seriously useful. 1000 synth shots all key-labeled and prepared for multiple EDM tasks, with 1129 total files including 129 sampler patches for EXS24, Kontakt, and Halion.
What I love about this pack is the one-shot focus. The shots can spark new ideas instantly, they’re easy to load and place, they save CPU compared to running synths, and they work as the cherry on top when a track needs that extra something.
For me the standout is the bass content focus. The pack leans into bass house, slap house, g-house, future house, deep house, wobble, dubstep, and bigroom trap with shocking LFO’d bass shots tempo-synced at 128 BPM.
The non-bass content also adds real range. Pianos, huge brass hits, various chords and stabs, sick flutes, guitars, saw lead screams, and plucks give you melodic options beyond just bass.
I appreciate the sampler patch organization. The patches are organized both random and in keys (G, F#, X, etc), which makes creating instant hooks in matching keys nearly effortless.
Pros: Massive 1000-shot count with key-labeled organization and sampler patches across multiple formats. Cons: One-shots only with no loops, so this works best as a layering supplement rather than a primary pack.

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!

