Loopy Pro: Create music, your way.

What is Loopy Pro?Loopy Pro is a powerful, flexible, and intuitive live looper, sampler, clip launcher and DAW for iPhone and iPad. At its core, it allows you to record and layer sounds in real-time to create complex musical arrangements. But it doesn’t stop there—Loopy Pro offers advanced tools to customize your workflow, build dynamic performance setups, and create a seamless connection between instruments, effects, and external gear.

Use it for live looping, sequencing, arranging, mixing, and much more. Whether you're a live performer, a producer, or just experimenting with sound, Loopy Pro helps you take control of your creative process.

Download on the App Store

Loopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.

New Audiothing and Hainbach line-simulator app: "LINES”. Out NOW!

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Comments

  • @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I’ve got just the thing 😄

  • @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

  • @hghon said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I’ve got just the thing 😄

    Niceee!

  • @HotStrange said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

    Count me in and I’d be willing to collate tracks and manage ver bandcamp page etc I think a compilation of spooky sounds would be awesome

    I was a big fan of this alb7m when it came out

    https://www.discogs.com/release/1541697-Various-Spooky-Sounds-Of-Now

  • Also, I suggest Medicins sans frontiers

  • @sevenape said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

    Count me in and I’d be willing to collate tracks and manage ver bandcamp page etc I think a compilation of spooky sounds would be awesome

    I was a big fan of this alb7m when it came out

    https://www.discogs.com/release/1541697-Various-Spooky-Sounds-Of-Now

    Nice! Bandcamp don't recommend lufs levels but a few things online said this:

    Target the loudness level of your master at -14 dB integrated LUFS and keep it below -1 dB TP (True Peak) max. This is best for the lossy formats we use (Ogg/Vorbis and AAC) and will ensure no extra distortion is introduced in the transcoding process

    Do you fancy starting a thread for that maybe then @sevenape? 👏 👏

  • @Slush said:

    @hghon said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I’ve got just the thing 😄

    Niceee!

    Thanks 😄

  • @sevenape said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

    Count me in and I’d be willing to collate tracks and manage ver bandcamp page etc I think a compilation of spooky sounds would be awesome

    I was a big fan of this alb7m when it came out

    https://www.discogs.com/release/1541697-Various-Spooky-Sounds-Of-Now

    Sweet! Sounds exciting

  • @sevenape said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

    Count me in and I’d be willing to collate tracks and manage ver bandcamp page etc I think a compilation of spooky sounds would be awesome

    I was a big fan of this alb7m when it came out

    https://www.discogs.com/release/1541697-Various-Spooky-Sounds-Of-Now

    Count me in as well!!

  • @Gavinski said:

    @sevenape said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @Gavinski said:

    @HotStrange said:

    @bygjohn said:

    @HotStrange said:
    This app is definitely working its way into the top apps of the year for me. Absolutely brilliant.

    Yup, I’ve spent hours with it. Pleasingly bonkers (in a very good way!).

    Same here! It’s a pretty unique effect. The sum of its parts is anyway. I love it over acoustic instruments. Especially organ and piano so far. Also pairs well with their other app, Noises.

    Even as an instrument it’s just excellent. And it gets sufficiently weird and spooky which is perfect for the season 😂

    Doesn't look like we will get another silent movie soundtrack out for Halloween (Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy). But we should maybe put together a little album of spooky 'non music' and sell it on Bandcamp or something, perhaps for charity? (cue massive forum argument over which charity it goes to 😂 😂 😂). If anyone fancies taking on that job, feel free to make a thread on it. I could contribute but don't have time to organise.

    I would happily contribute! I don’t have the time to lead the project but if someone starts it, I’ll gladly work something up for it. Doesn’t have to be a full film or anything. Like you said, we could all make maybe a 3-4 minutes spooky track and compile them together.

    Count me in and I’d be willing to collate tracks and manage ver bandcamp page etc I think a compilation of spooky sounds would be awesome

    I was a big fan of this alb7m when it came out

    https://www.discogs.com/release/1541697-Various-Spooky-Sounds-Of-Now

    Nice! Bandcamp don't recommend lufs levels but a few things online said this:

    Target the loudness level of your master at -14 dB integrated LUFS and keep it below -1 dB TP (True Peak) max. This is best for the lossy formats we use (Ogg/Vorbis and AAC) and will ensure no extra distortion is introduced in the transcoding process

    Do you fancy starting a thread for that maybe then @sevenape? 👏 👏

    Ok!

  • I’m in!

  • @Gavinski said:
    Synthi has been in touch btw - he's great and was very happy with Metropolis btw, he's just been super busy

    That’s good to hear.

  • @JanKun said:

    @richardyot said:
    Looks like I missed some forum drama. I'll don the appropriate safety gear and go read the thread in question.

    Save your time Richard. Here is the abstract:

    A member (with no clear motive?) revived an old thread about Ambient (no real bad intention from the OP in 2021) and fueled it with disdain claiming that's Ambient is not music and doesn't requires skills. Well...Opinions are opinions... It then evolved to a discussion about abstract and conceptual art with @Gavinski brilliantly mentioning the work of Marcel Duchamp to pinpoint the relevance of a Banana. The thread then reached its peak when another well known strongly opinioned member (and very likely blinded by parental love) chimed in to claim that his kids could do better then Jackson Pollock in a single afternoon. Yeah, you read right, a single afternoon !
    The thread necrophile then took the opportunity to indirectly attack some of the work of our well esteemed iOS community YouTuber (I love you Gavin !! But, script might not be a bad idea sometimes 😉).
    In between those highlights tons of love for ambient was transmitted and that was heartwarming.
    Reading this abstract, it sounds too juicy to be true... But, yeah, drama drama drama. I really feel like staying away from this kind of bulls... (for very good reasons😉)

    Can't wait to see what this Heinbach Audiothing Collab will bring !

    Wow, I totally missed this. Seems like it was a seminal forum moment, up there with a few other classics (nothing will ever dethrone the Drambo development saga…with the conclusion of it being released on April 1).

  • edited October 2023

    @Slush said:
    @Gavinski @hghon These explanations most certainly makes sense. It’s a mysterious box. Maybe it can communicate with ghosts too, have to try it tonight with an ouija board :)

    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

  • @oat_phipps said:

    @Slush said:
    @Gavinski @hghon These explanations most certainly makes sense. It’s a mysterious box. Maybe it can communicate with ghosts too, have to try it tonight with an ouija board :)

    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    I have no idea, was just kidding. I think the whole idea of Ouija boards goes back to the 19th century, the golden age of spiritism.

  • @Slush said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @Slush said:
    @Gavinski @hghon These explanations most certainly makes sense. It’s a mysterious box. Maybe it can communicate with ghosts too, have to try it tonight with an ouija board :)

    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    I have no idea, was just kidding. I think the whole idea of Ouija boards goes back to the 19th century, the golden age of spiritism.

    A @Hainbach Ouija board would sound bloody creepy…

  • @gusgranite said:

    @Slush said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @Slush said:
    @Gavinski @hghon These explanations most certainly makes sense. It’s a mysterious box. Maybe it can communicate with ghosts too, have to try it tonight with an ouija board :)

    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    I have no idea, was just kidding. I think the whole idea of Ouija boards goes back to the 19th century, the golden age of spiritism.

    A @Hainbach Ouija board would sound bloody creepy…

  • There is Embertone Arcane ... for those of you searching for a musical Oujia board. AFAIK, works with free version of Kontakt and qualifies you for crossgrade pricing to full Kontakt (pretty sure that's the route I went).

  • @JanKun said:
    [...] chimed in to claim that his kids could do better then Jackson Pollock in a single afternoon. Yeah, you read right, a single afternoon !

    I just Google Image searched that man and did an involuntary double blind test. I kept scrolling down through the search results. I thought "yeah OK... it's this 'modern art' stuff... apparently valuable but doesn't evoke much in me. Fair enough!"... a few pages down, I started thinking "Oh well, this is actually starting to look better and a bit more relatable and looking like someone made an effort!"...

    ...then I realized I was in "these kids get taught the Jackson Pollock style in art school" territory 🥴

    (true story! I just seem to have NO feel for visual arts or design!)

  • @SevenSystems said:

    @JanKun said:
    [...] chimed in to claim that his kids could do better then Jackson Pollock in a single afternoon. Yeah, you read right, a single afternoon !

    I just Google Image searched that man and did an involuntary double blind test. I kept scrolling down through the search results. I thought "yeah OK... it's this 'modern art' stuff... apparently valuable but doesn't evoke much in me. Fair enough!"... a few pages down, I started thinking "Oh well, this is actually starting to look better and a bit more relatable and looking like someone made an effort!"...

    ...then I realized I was in "these kids get taught the Jackson Pollock style in art school" territory 🥴

    (true story! I just seem to have NO feel for visual arts or design!)

    Not true! I love the look of your Xequence Keys, the use of colour etc

  • @Gavinski said:

    @SevenSystems said:

    @JanKun said:
    [...] chimed in to claim that his kids could do better then Jackson Pollock in a single afternoon. Yeah, you read right, a single afternoon !

    I just Google Image searched that man and did an involuntary double blind test. I kept scrolling down through the search results. I thought "yeah OK... it's this 'modern art' stuff... apparently valuable but doesn't evoke much in me. Fair enough!"... a few pages down, I started thinking "Oh well, this is actually starting to look better and a bit more relatable and looking like someone made an effort!"...

    ...then I realized I was in "these kids get taught the Jackson Pollock style in art school" territory 🥴

    (true story! I just seem to have NO feel for visual arts or design!)

    Not true! I love the look of your Xequence Keys, the use of colour etc

    Thank you! Well, then let's say my intuition for art isn't... modern 😁

  • Hey, just wanted to thank you all for your enthusiasm on Lines! It is wonderful to see that so many of you vibe with it, despite being a complex beast. Because I have gotten a bunch of questions in regards to how to work in reliable manner with feedback, I have made this little walk-through that will also appear in the manual.

    "Modeling a non-musical device as an effect/ instrument plug-in is definitely not an easy sell. Especially since AudioThing and me did not simplify the Axel Line Simulator, we just made it more fun an enjoyable to discover interesting sonic worlds with it. You have to be a little mad to unlock all its potential, so here is a "getting started" guide for the feedback part of it.

    Feedback is influenced by many factors, and it can quickly add up and become a wild mess. But It absolutely possible to get stable and reliable feedback every time if you get a feel for what each engine does. A good way is to start from scratch:

    Open the INIT patch and turn the pulse sequencer on. Set a pulse on every odd step. Turn on the frequency shifter and set it to around 530. Set feedback to max. You should hear a resonant ping with every pulse. Slowly open the input - a stable feedback tone appears and you can shape its tone with input volume.

    Set input volume back to middle position. Turn on 2nd order distortion, slowly open it up. Get a feel for the different resonance that brings. Turn it down again and engage 3rd order distortion. Turn that up, flip the phase, listen to what happens. At any point you can dial down feedback and up the distortion to get different colors of feedback, as only certain frequencies are excited using the 2nd and 3rd settings.

    You can tune the feedback with the low pass filter next to it. Open it up for wild sputtering, lower it for deep basses.
    Engage the line filters. Add more gain on the input if you don’t hear resonances, or up the hi and low q. Now play around with the frequency shifter and jitter.

    This should give you a good starting point. It takes a while to learn but it is a huge palette of colors to explore."

    We are already working on an update for some fixes.
    If you enjoy Lines, a review on the App Store is much appreciated. It helps us out a lot.

  • @Hainbach said:
    Hey, just wanted to thank you all for your enthusiasm on Lines! It is wonderful to see that so many of you vibe with it, despite being a complex beast. Because I have gotten a bunch of questions in regards to how to work in reliable manner with feedback, I have made this little walk-through that will also appear in the manual.

    "Modeling a non-musical device as an effect/ instrument plug-in is definitely not an easy sell. Especially since AudioThing and me did not simplify the Axel Line Simulator, we just made it more fun an enjoyable to discover interesting sonic worlds with it. You have to be a little mad to unlock all its potential, so here is a "getting started" guide for the feedback part of it.

    Feedback is influenced by many factors, and it can quickly add up and become a wild mess. But It absolutely possible to get stable and reliable feedback every time if you get a feel for what each engine does. A good way is to start from scratch:

    Open the INIT patch and turn the pulse sequencer on. Set a pulse on every odd step. Turn on the frequency shifter and set it to around 530. Set feedback to max. You should hear a resonant ping with every pulse. Slowly open the input - a stable feedback tone appears and you can shape its tone with input volume.

    Set input volume back to middle position. Turn on 2nd order distortion, slowly open it up. Get a feel for the different resonance that brings. Turn it down again and engage 3rd order distortion. Turn that up, flip the phase, listen to what happens. At any point you can dial down feedback and up the distortion to get different colors of feedback, as only certain frequencies are excited using the 2nd and 3rd settings.

    You can tune the feedback with the low pass filter next to it. Open it up for wild sputtering, lower it for deep basses.
    Engage the line filters. Add more gain on the input if you don’t hear resonances, or up the hi and low q. Now play around with the frequency shifter and jitter.

    This should give you a good starting point. It takes a while to learn but it is a huge palette of colors to explore."

    We are already working on an update for some fixes.
    If you enjoy Lines, a review on the App Store is much appreciated. It helps us out a lot.

    Fantastic work! Keep on bringing us these left field devices and ideas!!

  • @Hainbach said:
    Hey, just wanted to thank you all for your enthusiasm on Lines! It is wonderful to see that so many of you vibe with it, despite being a complex beast. Because I have gotten a bunch of questions in regards to how to work in reliable manner with feedback, I have made this little walk-through that will also appear in the manual.

    "Modeling a non-musical device as an effect/ instrument plug-in is definitely not an easy sell. Especially since AudioThing and me did not simplify the Axel Line Simulator, we just made it more fun an enjoyable to discover interesting sonic worlds with it. You have to be a little mad to unlock all its potential, so here is a "getting started" guide for the feedback part of it.

    Feedback is influenced by many factors, and it can quickly add up and become a wild mess. But It absolutely possible to get stable and reliable feedback every time if you get a feel for what each engine does. A good way is to start from scratch:

    Open the INIT patch and turn the pulse sequencer on. Set a pulse on every odd step. Turn on the frequency shifter and set it to around 530. Set feedback to max. You should hear a resonant ping with every pulse. Slowly open the input - a stable feedback tone appears and you can shape its tone with input volume.

    Set input volume back to middle position. Turn on 2nd order distortion, slowly open it up. Get a feel for the different resonance that brings. Turn it down again and engage 3rd order distortion. Turn that up, flip the phase, listen to what happens. At any point you can dial down feedback and up the distortion to get different colors of feedback, as only certain frequencies are excited using the 2nd and 3rd settings.

    You can tune the feedback with the low pass filter next to it. Open it up for wild sputtering, lower it for deep basses.
    Engage the line filters. Add more gain on the input if you don’t hear resonances, or up the hi and low q. Now play around with the frequency shifter and jitter.

    This should give you a good starting point. It takes a while to learn but it is a huge palette of colors to explore."

    We are already working on an update for some fixes.
    If you enjoy Lines, a review on the App Store is much appreciated. It helps us out a lot.

    Thanks, really cool.

  • And thanks for taking the time. You can tell when someone’s work is an actual labor of love 👍

  • edited October 2023

    @oat_phipps said:
    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    Do they work for contacting the dead? No.

  • @Simon said:

    @oat_phipps said:
    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    Do they work for contacting the dead? No.

    Check this out, a Spirit Box: https://www.amazon.com/SB7-Spirit-Box-Ghost-Hunting/dp/B07THLDF1Y

    “scans radio frequencies or “white noise” to allow for spirit communication.” :D

    We need that as an auv3! B)

  • @Slush said:

    @Simon said:

    @oat_phipps said:
    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    Do they work for contacting the dead? No.

    Check this out, a Spirit Box: https://www.amazon.com/SB7-Spirit-Box-Ghost-Hunting/dp/B07THLDF1Y

    “scans radio frequencies or “white noise” to allow for spirit communication.” :D

    We need that as an auv3! B)

    Looks like a variant of the ghost noises on tape thing. (Nice idea, but tripe.)

  • the radios scanner is used in Estes Method.

    The Estes Method is a paranormal investigation technique that has gained popularity in recent years and was first developed by Karl Pfeiffer during his investigation of the Stanley Hotel, at Estes Park, in Colorado – the same hotel that inspired horror author Stephen King to write his classic novel, The Shining.

    The technique involves using sensory deprivation and a spirit box to communicate with potential spirits in a given location. While some see the Estes Method as a bit of a controversial technique as it uses a spirit box (which can be affected by external factors), its popularity and effectiveness in gathering potential evidence is steadily increasing.

    https://www.hallozween.com.au/the-estes-method/

  • . > @bygjohn said:

    @Slush said:

    @Simon said:

    @oat_phipps said:
    I’ve never had the chance to use an Ouija board…never even seen one in person. I always figured it was a hoax where the person with the cursor just tried to scare the crap out of the others in the room. At the risk of sounding like a naive 6 year old…do they actually work?

    Do they work for contacting the dead? No.

    Check this out, a Spirit Box: https://www.amazon.com/SB7-Spirit-Box-Ghost-Hunting/dp/B07THLDF1Y

    “scans radio frequencies or “white noise” to allow for spirit communication.” :D

    We need that as an auv3! B)

    Looks like a variant of the ghost noises on tape thing. (Nice idea, but tripe.)

    Tripe or trite? 😂

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