Ender Scroll
Dogleg
The tempo here is almost cruel in how relentless it is — the drums rarely let up, and the guitars chase each other in tight, overlapping spirals that feel like scrolling through something infinite and overwhelming. "Ender Scroll" has a nervy, overclocked energy that makes other fast songs feel leisurely by comparison; the production is live-room loud, with just enough clarity to follow each instrument before the whole thing swallows itself again. Stoitsiadis delivers the lyrics in bursts, half-shouted and half-sung, the kind of delivery that makes it hard to tell whether the song is cathartic or distressing — probably both. The title nods to gaming, and the song captures something specific about that experience: the way a screen can become a place to disappear into when the real world is too much, and how that disappearance has its own texture of numbness and motion. Culturally, it fits into a tradition of emo that takes technology not as subject matter but as emotional metaphor — the endless scroll, the next level, the refusal to stop. This is the song for 3 a.m. when you're still awake doing nothing in particular and the silence feels worse than noise.
very fast
2020s
dense, spiraling, overwhelming
American Midwest emo
Post-Hardcore, Emo. Midwest emo. anxious, dissociative. Sustains relentless overclocked momentum throughout, capturing both the numbness of endless distraction and the dread underneath it without offering a way out.. energy 9. very fast. danceability 4. valence 3. vocals: half-shouted male, bursting, urgent, melodic-aggressive. production: live-room clarity, spiraling tight guitars, relentless drums. texture: dense, spiraling, overwhelming. acousticness 1. era: 2020s. American Midwest emo. 3 a.m. still awake doing nothing in particular, when the silence feels worse than noise.