Best Walrus Audio Pedals

Top 10 picks ranked by EJ Score

Our Top Picks

Looking for the walrus audio pedals? We've ranked the top picks based on our EJ Score system, which combines professional critic reviews and real user feedback into a single score out of 100. Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned player, this list will help you find the right fit.

The Kangra is a freak-show pedal in the best way. The filter modes open up psychedelic territory that straight fuzz can’t touch, and the expression control is genuinely musical once you dial it in. But this is a specialist tool—if…

Pros

  • +Dual footswitches for fuzz and filter allow independent or stacked operation
  • +Expression pedal input gives hands-free wah/filter control for dynamic playing
  • +Three filter modes (low-pass, band-pass, high-pass) provide serious tonal range

Cons

  • $219 is expensive for a fuzz pedal in a crowded boutique market
  • Dual footswitch layout eats pedalboard space—this is a big enclosure
Read full review →

The Iron Horse V3 earns its 95 EJ score by being more than just another RAT clone—it’s a refined, versatile take that actually improves on the formula. Guitar World’s perfect 5/5 and MusicRadar’s 4.5/5 align with our take: this is…

Pros

  • +Continuous Si/LED clipping dial offers huge tonal range from transparent OD to gnarly high-gain
  • +LM308 chip delivers that classic RAT-style thick, punchy distortion character
  • +Massive tone knob sweep from bright and cutting to dark and woofy

Cons

  • Can get excessively muddy with too much low end at higher settings
  • Gets overly crunchy past 10 o'clock on the distortion knob for some applications
Read full review →

The Voyager MKII nails the “transparent overdrive” brief without being boring. The three-band EQ is the key differentiator—you can sculpt this pedal to fit virtually any amp/guitar combo, from scooped modern metal to mid-forward classic rock. It’s not a one-trick…

Pros

  • +Three-band EQ (bass, mid, treble) provides surgical tone shaping compared to simple tone knobs
  • +Wide gain range from clean boost to saturated overdrive handles multiple roles on a pedalboard
  • +High headroom preamp section works beautifully as an always-on buffer/tone enhancer

Cons

  • Bluesbreaker-style voicing won't satisfy players seeking Tube Screamer mid-hump aggression
  • Three knobs for EQ plus gain and volume can be overwhelming for set-and-forget players
Read full review →

The Qi Etherealizer is Walrus Audio flexing their ambient muscle in collaboration with one of modern guitar’s most innovative voices. If you’re chasing Covet-style soundscapes or need a stereo multi-FX workhorse that goes beyond boring bedroom reverb, this delivers. The…

Pros

  • +Stereo I/O allows for wide, immersive ambient textures
  • +Walrus Audio's new MDSP platform enables compact size without sacrificing processing power
  • +Designed with Yvette Young's innovative fingerstyle approach—excels at lush, layered tones

Cons

  • No community reviews yet—too new to gauge long-term reliability
  • At $450, it's a significant investment for a single pedal
Read full review →

Guitar World’s 4.5-star review nails it: this is “a chameleon for your pedalboard” built for experimentalists. The 90 critic score reflects strong execution of a specific vision—this isn’t trying to be a Swiss Army knife like the HX One, it’s…

Pros

  • +Five programs offer genuinely creative combinations—reverse delay into octave reverbs, pitch delays into pitch delays
  • +Dual DSP chips with analog feedback path create complex, evolving textures that feel organic, not digital
  • +Tap tempo for delays and time-stretching for reverbs provide performance-ready real-time control

Cons

  • Not designed for traditional delay tasks—dialing in a simple slapback echo is challenging by design
  • No expression pedal input—tap-tempo and hold-for-pitch-shift only, limiting real-time control options
Read full review →

Walrus Audio’s Eons Five-State Fuzz proves that modern fuzz design can honor tradition while pushing into new territory. Unlike single-mode fuzzes that lock you into one sonic character, the Eons offers five distinct modes tuned to different playing styles and…

Pros

  • +Five distinct fuzz modes (raw, vintage, compressed, aggressive, extreme) offer unprecedented variety in one pedal
  • +Variable voltage control (3V to 18V) changes compression and saturation characteristics dramatically
  • +Bass and Treble controls provide surgical EQ without requiring a separate tone-shaping pedal

Cons

  • Learning curve required to fully explore five modes and voltage options — not a grab-and-go pedal
  • Some players find the lack of a Blend control (compared to Walrus's Distortion Five-State) limiting
Read full review →

Side-by-Side Comparison

The Bottom Line

That wraps up our picks for the walrus audio pedals. Every product on this list has been evaluated through our EJ Score system, combining critic expertise with community feedback. Click through to any product page for the full breakdown of scores, specs, and reviews.