Synthwave is an electronic music microgenre built around 1980s nostalgia: analog-style synthesizers, gated-reverb drums, neon arpeggios, and a cinematic, retro-futuristic mood. Tempos usually sit in a relaxed 80–118 BPM range, and the whole sound is engineered to feel like the soundtrack to an imaginary 1984 action film — chrome supercars, night drives, and VHS sunsets.
This guide covers what synthwave actually is, where it came from, how to recognise it by ear, the instruments and production tricks that define it, its major sub-styles, how it differs from ambient and lo-fi, and the artists worth knowing. Heard a neon-soaked track and want to be sure? Hand a few seconds of it to our free AI music genre detector and the model will tell you whether those gated drums and analog arpeggios add up to synthwave.
What Is Synthwave?
Synthwave (also called retrowave or outrun) is an electronic microgenre that deliberately recreates the sound and feel of 1980s film scores, video games, and pop production. Its core ingredients are warm analog-style synthesizers, big gated-reverb drums, melodic bass arpeggios, and lush, sustained pads — all arranged to evoke a retro-futuristic, neon-lit atmosphere rather than a modern club.
Unlike most dance genres, synthwave is mood-led rather than dancefloor-functional. It borrows the textures of John Carpenter, Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, and Giorgio Moroder, then filters them through modern production. Many tracks are instrumental and cinematic, structured like a score — an evolving build of layered synths — while the more pop-leaning corner adds airy vocals. If a piece of music sounds like it could play over the opening credits of a 1985 sci-fi thriller, you are almost certainly hearing synthwave.
History & Origins
Synthwave emerged in the mid-to-late 2000s, growing out of the French house and French electro scene rather than any single city's club culture. Producers nostalgic for 1980s media began fusing the cinematic synth scores of John Carpenter, Vangelis, and Tangerine Dream with the punchy electro of the Ed Banger / Valerie era. The French artist Kavinsky (Vincent Belorgey) was an early catalyst — his 2006 track "Testarossa Autodrive" (from the 1986 EP) and the OutRun-inspired car mythology helped define the genre's driving, cinematic identity. David Grellier, as College, founded the Valerie Collective, an early home for the sound.
The genre broke into mainstream awareness through Nicolas Winding Refn's 2011 film Drive. Its soundtrack featured Kavinsky's "Nightcall" and College & Electric Youth's "A Real Hero," wrapping the music in the "neon-noir" night-driving imagery that became inseparable from synthwave. The 2012 video game Hotline Miami — and Kavinsky's full-length album OutRun (2013) — accelerated the genre's reach, especially among gamers.
From there the scene exploded online through labels and communities such as NewRetroWave, Rosso Corsa, and the broader "retrowave" YouTube ecosystem. By the late 2010s synthwave had splintered into distinct sub-styles — including the heavier, horror-tinged darksynth pioneered by Perturbator and Carpenter Brut — and had crossed back into mainstream culture via the soundtracks of Stranger Things, Blade Runner 2049, and countless games and ads.
Key Characteristics & Sound
You can usually identify synthwave by these traits:
- Tempo: typically 80–118 BPM — relaxed and mid-paced, slower than house or techno.
- Drums: big gated-reverb snares (the iconic "huge 80s drum" sound), straight programmed beats, and electronic toms.
- Synths: warm analog-style pads, bright lead lines, and rapid arpeggios that drive the rhythm.
- Bass: rolling, melodic synth bass — often pulsing in eighth or sixteenth notes.
- Atmosphere: lush reverb, chorus, and tape-style saturation for a nostalgic, VHS-era haze.
- Mood: cinematic and retro-futuristic — nostalgic and dreamy in the lighter styles, dark and menacing in darksynth.
If a track feels like a 1980s movie score — neon arpeggios, a thick gated snare, and a wash of analog pads at a relaxed tempo — you are hearing synthwave. The feel and tempo shift noticeably between sub-styles:
| Sub-style | Typical BPM | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| Outrun | 80–110 | Driving, neon, cinematic |
| Dreamwave | 85–105 | Soft, romantic, hazy |
| Retrowave / Pop | 100–115 | Vocal-led, upbeat, 80s-pop |
| Darksynth | 100–130 | Aggressive, horror, distorted |
| Spacesynth-leaning | 115–130 | Fast arpeggios, energetic |
Instruments & Production
Synthwave is a producer's genre, and almost every sound is electronic and rooted in 1980s gear:
- Analog synthesizers: the Roland Juno-106 and Jupiter-8, Yamaha DX7, Korg Polysix, Oberheim and Prophet-style polysynths — sources of the warm pads, brass stabs, and bell leads.
- Drum machines: the LinnDrum and Roland TR-707/909, whose sampled toms and claps are central to the period sound.
- Gated reverb: the defining drum effect — a huge reverb tail abruptly cut short, giving snares their cavernous, explosive 1980s slam.
- Arpeggiators: hardware and software arps generate the cascading, hypnotic note runs that propel most tracks.
- Effects: chorus, analog-style delay, and tape/VHS saturation to glue everything into a nostalgic haze.
Production-wise, synthwave leans on layered synth pads, sidechained bass, and a deliberate "vintage" mix that favours warmth over modern brightness. Today the vast majority is made entirely in a DAW with software emulations of that classic hardware, but the textural blueprint — gated drums, analog pads, and arpeggios — stays faithful to 1984.
Sub-styles of Synthwave
Synthwave has branched into several recognisable styles. The most important:
- Outrun — the driving, neon, cinematic core of the genre, named after the 1986 Sega arcade racer; classic Kavinsky-style night-drive music.
- Darksynth — heavier, faster, and distorted, with industrial and horror influences; built around aggressive bass and action-movie menace (Perturbator, Carpenter Brut, Dance with the Dead).
- Dreamwave — softer and more romantic, with hazy pads and emotional melodies; the gentlest end of the spectrum.
- Retrowave / Synthpop-leaning — the vocal-led, upbeat, pop-oriented corner, closest to actual 1980s pop (The Midnight, FM-84, Timecop1983).
- Spacesynth-influenced styles — faster, brighter, arpeggio-heavy tracks that nod to Italo-disco and 80s space synth.
Synthwave also sits close to neighbouring genres. It shares the nostalgic, lo-fi 1980s palette with chillwave — a parallel mid-2000s revival movement — though chillwave is dreamier, more hypnagogic and less rhythmically driven, while synthwave is sharper, more cinematic, and beat-focused.
Synthwave vs Ambient vs Lo-Fi
Synthwave is sometimes confused with other atmospheric, synth-heavy styles. All three favour texture and mood, but their roots, rhythm, and intent differ:
| Trait | Synthwave | Ambient | Lo-Fi |
|---|---|---|---|
| Origin | Mid-2000s, French electro revival | 1970s, Brian Eno / Tangerine Dream | 1990s–2010s, hip-hop & bedroom production |
| Tempo | 80–118 BPM | No fixed beat, often beatless | 70–90 BPM |
| Rhythm | Driving, gated drums + arps | Minimal or absent | Loose, dusty boom-bap |
| Mood | Cinematic, neon, retro-futuristic | Drifting, meditative, spacious | Cozy, nostalgic, mellow |
| Core sound | Analog synths, gated reverb | Sustained pads, drones, field recordings | Jazzy samples, vinyl crackle |
Notable Artists & Tracks
Foundational and influential synthwave acts include:
- Kavinsky — "Nightcall," "Testarossa Autodrive"; the OutRun mythos and Drive's signature sound.
- College — "A Real Hero" (with Electric Youth) and the Valerie Collective that helped birth the scene.
- The Midnight — "Sunset," "Los Angeles"; the saxophone-and-vocals face of melodic retrowave.
- Com Truise — "Brokendate"; woozy, downtempo "mid-fi synth-wave."
- Carpenter Brut — "Turbo Killer"; a leading darksynth name with action-movie aggression.
- Perturbator — a darksynth pioneer, central to the Hotline Miami soundtrack.
- FM-84, Timecop1983, Gunship — defining the vocal, emotional retrowave wave.
Start with "Nightcall," "A Real Hero," and "Sunset" to hear the genre's arc from neon-noir cinema to widescreen synthpop.
Synthwave Around the World & Today
What began in French bedrooms and online forums is now a global movement. Sweden produced melodic retrowave staples (FM-84, Timecop1983); the United States gave it widescreen pop polish (The Midnight, Gunship); and France remained the heart of darksynth (Carpenter Brut, Perturbator, Dance with the Dead). The aesthetic — neon grids, chrome cars, palm-tree sunsets — travels everywhere through YouTube channels and streaming playlists.
In the 2020s synthwave is more visible than ever. The Stranger Things score, Blade Runner 2049, the Kung Fury short, and countless games and adverts have pushed its sound into the mainstream, while the genre keeps splintering into darker and dreamier offshoots. For a revival genre, synthwave has proven remarkably durable — the gated snare and analog arpeggio that evoked 1984 still feel fresh two decades into its existence.
How AI Detects Synthwave
Synthwave hands an AI model a very specific palette to read: a relaxed tempo band, the explosive crack of gated-reverb drums, warm analog-style pads, and the cascading arpeggios that drive the groove. The classifier turns those textures into measurements and compares them against the acoustic signatures it has learned for every style in its catalogue. Synthwave shares so much DNA with ambient, synthpop, and film score that the model usually answers with a ranked spread of likelihoods rather than committing to one tag.
It is worth trying for yourself. Open the Genre AI music genre detector, let it sample a few seconds of a track, and it will report whether it reads as synthwave and which sub-style is closest. To dig into the model behind that answer, see our explainer on how AI music genre detection works.
When we put tracks through Genre AI ourselves, the Synthwave reading is strongest on retro analog-style synths and a big gated-reverb snare sitting at a relaxed 80–118 BPM over arpeggiated bass. Distort those drums and push the tempo past 120 and the weighting moves toward Darksynth; soften the beat until the pads take over and it leans Dreamwave. Laying those sibling styles out together is what lets you place a track that sits on the seam between them.