Built for artists and fans, not off them
Our mission is to care for artists so they can thrive through their art, and for fans so they can truly enjoy every moment.
Byte Beat Works: The Story
Byte Beat Works was born from the union of artists and fans, both fed up with how independent record labels operate.
Imagine being an artist. You sign a contract full of promises about how the label will promote your work… only to realize that, for them, you only matter as much as your fanbase is willing to pay. No commitment, no passion—just money. Often, you end up doing their work, while they keep signing new artists to exploit in the same way.
Imagine being a fan. Every day, you’re faced with posts screaming “now out! Go listen!” without passion, without engagement. The same message, the same words, over and over.
Byte Beat Works exists because of this frustration. It exists thanks to the meeting of artists and fans who wanted something different and decided to join forces and create that “something”: an organic system where everyone can grow, participate, and truly enjoy the experience.
Creating a project like this is, of course, anything but simple.
How do you reach new people in a system dominated by algorithms, rigged to reward only the biggest manipulations or those who spend the most on ads?
How do you make it financially sustainable for our artists? How do you give them real attention, without falling into the trap of signing more and more artists just to stay afloat, leaving each of them neglected? And at the same time, how do you make the experience genuinely fun and engaging for fans?
For a label like ours, dedicated to retro-inspired music, the answer was in the genre itself.
Retro music, often inspired by the soundtracks of classic video games.
And then we asked ourselves… what if we turned the whole experience into a game?
Once we asked that question, everything became clearer.
If the experience is a game, artists can become characters within it. And if the artists are characters… maybe they can level up based on how far their music reaches listeners, and how much those listeners are willing to support them.
We could even create an entire world, with stories that evolve based on fan choices and interactions under every post.
Of course, a game can’t have an endless stream of characters. So we focus on a small number of selected artists—people with drive and passion for their craft, and dedicate ourselves fully to their growth.
This way, artists can focus on their art exactly the way they want, without being turned into marketing products or forced into costly promotions they wouldn’t do otherwise.
The possibilities became endless.
At that point, the real work began.
Designing every pixel art asset.
Creating characters, stories, and an entire world.
Building the game mechanics themselves.
Choosing the right platforms.
Years of work: work that, by the very nature of this ever-evolving project, may never truly end.
And yet, it’s work that fills us with hope.
The hope that art created with genuine passion can bridge the gap that this increasingly hollow system has built between artists and fans.
The hope that talented artists can find support, inspiration, and a space where their vision truly matters.
The hope that even our fans’ lives can be, in a way, lightened, made more enjoyable, by the experience we are building.
And the hope that, in an era where value often seems measured by exposure, compromise, and manipulation, people can rediscover the true worth of passion, and the work behind bringing it to life.