For years, drone metal fanatics and gain connoisseurs have hunted the resale market, willing to pay exorbitant prices for a piece of heavy metal history. The object of desire? The legendary, limited-run EarthQuaker Devices Sunn O))) Life Pedal.
Now, the holy grail of doom is back, shrunk down, and officially joining the permanent roster. EarthQuaker Devices has officially unveiled the HalfLife Octave Distortion + Booster, packing all the massive, amp-melting fury of its predecessors into a highly compact, pedalboard-friendly enclosure.
Shrunk Down, Loaded Up: The HalfLife Evolution
Designed in collaboration with drone metal pioneers Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson of Sunn O))), the HalfLife replicates the exact front-end signal chain used during the historic Life Metal recording sessions with the late, great recording engineer Steve Albini.
While previous iterations were strictly limited runs due to their reliance on rare, New Old Stock (NOS) components, EQD founder Jamie Stillman has completely reworked the circuit using a steady supply of modern components. The result? The HalfLife is permanently joining the EQD lineup.

Compact Doom
To achieve its compact footprint, the HalfLife is roughly half the size of the original Life Pedal units. While you can no longer foot-switch the octave and fuzz separately, the interface has been streamlined.
The control surface is now vastly more intuitive, with the Amplitude and Octave knobs swapping places for easier on-the-fly tweaking. Stillman also refined the analog octave effect, making it much more prominent without sacrificing an ounce of vital low-end frequency response.

Sonic Destruction in Three Stages
The HalfLife’s internal signal path flows strictly from Octave ➔ Distortion ➔ Boost, offering independent footswitch control for the distortion and booster circuits.
1. The Octave Section
An all-discrete analog full-wave rectifier circuit sits right at the input. The Octave (O) knob blends the effect in seamlessly. For hands-free sonic chaos, players can connect an expression pedal to the dedicated Octave EXP Jack to sweep the octave mix mid-riff. Because it’s an all-analog, monophonic effect, it tracks best on single notes played above the 12th fret using a neck pickup. Maxing out the control transforms the pedal into a raging, vintage Super Fuzz-style beast.
2. The Amplitude (Distortion) Section
Faithfully modeled after the legendary “White Face” big-box rodent distortion circuit, this section features a 3-way Clipping Switch (CLIP) to adapt to any amplifier rig:
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OpAmp: Bypasses all diodes for a massive, uncompressed, high-volume OpAmp assault.
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Asymm: Combines two silicon diodes and one LED in an asymmetrical configuration, delivering a smooth, compressed crunch that mirrors the natural sag of a cooking valve amp.
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Symm: The stock, double-silicon diode configuration for that classic, tight, heavily compressed heavy metal crunch.
3. The Magnitude (Boost) Section
The final stage is a 100% clean, high-impedance, discrete MOSFET booster controlled by the Magnitude (MAG) knob. It introduces no coloration or clipping of its own. Instead, it acts as a transparent sledgehammer engineered to drive vintage tube power sections—like a legendary Sunn O))) Model T stack—into total harmonic saturation and feedback bliss.

Specifications and Controls At A Glance
| Control | Function | Description |
| Octave (O) | Analog Octave Blend | Blends in the analog octave effect as turned clockwise. |
| Filter (F) | Low Pass Filter | Sweeps from 500 Hz to 30 kHz. Counterclockwise for bite; clockwise to smooth out highs. |
| Distortion (D) | Gain Control | Provides up to +60dB of aggressive gain. |
| Amplitude (AMP) | Distortion Volume | Controls the output level of the distortion/octave side. |
| Magnitude (MAG) | Booster Volume | Output volume for the MOSFET boost. Unity gain rests at 12 o’clock. |
| Clipping Switch | OpAmp / Asymm / Symm | Alternates between no diodes, asymmetrical diode/LED, or stock symmetric silicon. |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is the difference between the HalfLife and the original Life Pedal?
The HalfLife is approximately half the physical size of the original Life Pedals. Because of the smaller footprint, the octave and fuzz can no longer be activated via separate footswitches. However, the circuit has been updated with modern, readily available components for permanent production, the octave tracker has been refined for better presence, and the control layout has been optimized.
Can the distortion and boost sections be used independently?
Yes. The HalfLife features dual footswitches. The right footswitch engages the Octave Distortion (Amplitude) section, and the left footswitch engages the MOSFET Booster (Magnitude) section. You can run either one on its own or stack them together.
What kind of expression pedal can I use with the HalfLife?
You can connect any standard expression pedal to the Octave EXP Jack to control the analog octave blend dynamically with your foot.
Where is the HalfLife manufactured?
Like all EarthQuaker Devices stompboxes, the HalfLife is built by hand in Akron, Ohio, USA, and comes backed by EQD’s limited lifetime warranty and proprietary Flexi-Switch technology.

The Verdict
Score: 9.5 / 10
EarthQuaker Devices and Sunn O))) have delivered an absolute triumph. By stripping away the artificial scarcity of limited NOS component runs and shrinking the enclosure, they have democratized one of the greatest heavy music tools ever engineered. The inclusion of an expression jack for the octave and the improved low-end tracking make it more versatile than ever—not just for doom guitarists, but for bassists, synth players, and studio producers alike.
If you want the ultimate wall of sound without sacrificing half your pedalboard, the HalfLife is a mandatory acquisition.
Where To Buy
The EarthQuaker Devices HalfLife Octave Distortion + Booster is available now for $259 USD / £265 GBP.

For more information, visit EarthQuaker Devices.
#EarthQuaker Devices #HalfLife #Sunn O)))
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