PSYROM returns on May 24 for another extended underground session, bringing together a lineup focused on deep techno pressure, raw atmosphere and full dancefloor immersion somewhere inside Amsterdam.
The exact location remains secret for now, but the organizers already made one thing clear:
this edition takes place “at the place that feels like home.”
That description alone says a lot about what PSYROM has become.
Rather than operating like a conventional nightlife event, the series has steadily built its identity around intimacy, sound quality and uncompromising underground atmosphere. Dark rooms, sweat-covered walls, long-form sets and a crowd fully committed to the music remain central to the experience.
No spectacle.
No distractions.
And importantly, no phones.
The event’s strict no-phone policy reinforces exactly the kind of environment PSYROM wants to protect — one where dancers stay fully present inside the moment rather than experiencing the night through screens and social media documentation.
That mentality feels increasingly important in contemporary club culture.
As more dancefloors become hyper-visible and performative, underground projects like PSYROM continue pushing back toward anonymity, immersion and collective connection through sound alone.
Musically, the lineup reflects that philosophy perfectly.
Wees, Cobahn, Human Space Machine, Thoms Traxx and JP Enfant guide the journey across twelve intense hours of hypnotic techno, industrial tension and groove-heavy progression.
Each artist contributes a different shade of underground energy while maintaining the cohesive sonic identity PSYROM has become known for.
JP Enfant brings his signature blend of dark hypnotic textures and driving rhythmic control, while Human Space Machine pushes deeper into atmospheric and emotionally immersive techno territory. Cobahn and Thoms Traxx contribute raw warehouse pressure and groove-focused progression, while Wees rounds out the lineup through deep dancefloor functionality and long-form flow.
Together, the artists create an experience designed not around individual headline moments, but around sustained collective intensity from afternoon into early morning.
The daytime start also changes the emotional dynamic completely.
Beginning at 13:00 allows the event to evolve gradually over hours rather than exploding immediately into peak-time energy. As daylight slowly disappears, the room naturally transforms with the music — shifting from daytime movement into darker and more hypnotic nighttime immersion.
That evolution has always been essential to proper underground techno culture.
The best nights are not rushed.
They slowly consume the space until dancers lose all sense of time inside the rhythm.
PSYROM continues chasing exactly that feeling.
On May 24, somewhere in Amsterdam, another hidden room becomes a temporary home for people who still believe club culture works best in darkness, sweat and total surrender to sound.
