2 min read

Reverb

Adds a sense of space — the natural echo you hear in a room, a hall or a cathedral. A little makes flat recordings feel more alive; a lot creates dreamy atmosphere.

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How it works

When a sound plays in a real space, it bounces off the walls, floor and ceiling, creating thousands of tiny echoes that arrive just after the original. That wash of reflections is reverb — it's why a cathedral sounds huge and a tiny closet sounds dead and flat.

AudioMatch recreates that artificially. In Basic mode you simply pick a ready-made space — a small room, a large hall, a "plate" (a classic studio reverb sound) and so on. In Pro mode you can shape the space yourself with the detailed controls below.

What you can use it for on your phone

  • Add life and atmosphere to dry studio or acoustic recordings.
  • Create a relaxed, roomy feel for background or ambient listening.
  • Give an audiobook a slightly less "boxed-in" sound with a very subtle setting.

How to use it

Start in Basic and pick a preset that suits the mood (Large Hall is a pleasant default). For finer control, switch to Pro and adjust the dials — tap a value to type it, double-tap to reset. Keep the Wet control modest so the original sound stays clear and up front. (Advanced interface for the Pro controls.)

Why it helps

It turns dry, flat recordings into something more spacious and natural — or adds deliberate, dreamy atmosphere when you want it.

Settings explained

  • Decay — How long the echo tail lasts before fading — in effect, how big the room is. Short = a small room; long = a huge hall.
  • Damping — How quickly the bright, high part of the echo fades. More damping = a warmer, softer, darker tail.
  • Room — The overall size and character of the imagined space.
  • Wet — How much reverb is mixed in versus the original "dry" sound. Low = a subtle hint; high = swimming in echo. Keep it modest.
  • Diffusion — How smooth versus grainy the echoes are. Higher = smoother and more natural.
  • Density — How tightly packed the echoes are. Higher = a thicker, richer tail.
  • Reflections — The level of the first few early echoes that set the initial sense of the room.

What the live display shows

The decay graph draws the shape of the echo tail over time — how loud it starts and how long it takes to fade — so you can see whether you've built a quick, tight room or a long, lush hall.

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