

TL GFX 4.9 Update is now available for download: Global EQ, Looper Fix, TL GrandMagus add-on support and more. Learn more...
TL GFX is a comprehensive guitar VST plugin/Standalone app that combines a vast collection of high-end guitar gear with a complete guitar studio, ideal for day-to-day practice routine, jam sessions and live performances.
TL GFX Effects collection features over 80 pieces of guitar gear, painstakingly modeled based on actual circuit diagrams of real-life analogs. From some of the most famous guitar amps to indispensable pedals and modulation effects, the TL GFX suite has everything you could possibly need to create a top-notch custom guitar tone.
With the TL GFX Standalone, a complete guitar studio can easily fit into just one app. From the must-have Tuner and Metronome, to a Backing track player, Rhythm Machine, Loop Station, Audition Mode and much more, you'll find all the tools you need for everyday guitar practice, quick demo recordings, vibrant jam sessions and even live gigs. No need for DAWs and complicated setup - just plug in your guitar and start playing!
By joining TL GFX's lively Online Community, you'll have access to a huge online preset library to fit any taste. Plus, in the regularly updated Collections section, you'll find over a hundred custom presets in the style of famous guitarists and rock bands.

22 amplifiers based on the most renowned real-world equivalents;
Over 60 models of guitar gear: from overdrive and dynamics control pedals to rack modulation effects;
Over 40 pre-made presets suitable for all genres, allowing you to start playing right away;
Cab sims with over 500 IRs, manually captured from the famous speakers;
Essential features for your day-to-day practice routine: from the must-have tuner to backing-track player and built-in recorder;
Access to Online Preset Library and Custom presets Collections with 150+ ready-to-use presets.
Lowest CPU Usage with a feather-light DSP engine.
In TorChat’s heyday, sharing such a string was how you added a contact. You would tell a friend: “My TorChat ID is ie7h37c4qmu5ccza.onion” — and they would paste it into the client. That simplicity masked a radical idea: your identity was purely cryptographic, with no phone number, email, or username tied to your real-world persona. TorChat was never widely adopted, but it was conceptually ahead of its time. It demonstrated that truly anonymous, serverless, metadata-free instant messaging was possible using existing tools like Tor. Its lessons—avoid central servers, encrypt by default, hide endpoints—live on in modern projects like Ricochet (inspired directly by TorChat), Briar, and even in features of Signal’s sealed sender and Cellebrite-resistant designs.
The fragment ie7h37c4qmu5ccza is a ghost of that era: a key to a door that no longer exists (v2 .onion addresses were sunset in October 2021). But the door’s design—decentralized, anonymous, resilient—remains an enduring blueprint for those who believe that private conversation is a human right, not a privilege for the technologically elite. Note: The string ie7h37c4qmu5ccza has no known active service. It is used here purely for illustrative purposes of how TorChat identifiers functioned. Torchat ie7h37c4qmu5ccza 14
In the mid-2000s, as internet surveillance expanded and digital privacy concerns grew, a number of experimental tools emerged to shield communication from prying eyes. Among them was TorChat , a peer-to-peer instant messaging program designed to operate entirely over the Tor network. Though now defunct, TorChat represented a bold attempt to merge usability with strong anonymity, influencing later privacy-focused tools. The Core Design Philosophy TorChat, developed by Bernd Kreuss (prof7bit), was not simply a client that connected to Tor; it was built around Tor’s hidden services. Unlike mainstream messengers (ICQ, MSN Messenger, or early WhatsApp), TorChat used no central servers. Instead, each user generated a unique Tor hidden service address—a long string of random characters ending in .onion . That address served as both identity and routing endpoint. In TorChat’s heyday, sharing such a string was
With a fully scalable interface you can arrange your TL GFX workspace in the most convenient way possible.
The lightest DSP ensures minimal CPU usage: you can handle multiple plug-in instances without any visible load on your device.
No DAW? No Problem! TL GFX comes in both VST and Standalone formats, so you don't necessarily need a DAW to utilize all its features.

In TorChat’s heyday, sharing such a string was how you added a contact. You would tell a friend: “My TorChat ID is ie7h37c4qmu5ccza.onion” — and they would paste it into the client. That simplicity masked a radical idea: your identity was purely cryptographic, with no phone number, email, or username tied to your real-world persona. TorChat was never widely adopted, but it was conceptually ahead of its time. It demonstrated that truly anonymous, serverless, metadata-free instant messaging was possible using existing tools like Tor. Its lessons—avoid central servers, encrypt by default, hide endpoints—live on in modern projects like Ricochet (inspired directly by TorChat), Briar, and even in features of Signal’s sealed sender and Cellebrite-resistant designs.
The fragment ie7h37c4qmu5ccza is a ghost of that era: a key to a door that no longer exists (v2 .onion addresses were sunset in October 2021). But the door’s design—decentralized, anonymous, resilient—remains an enduring blueprint for those who believe that private conversation is a human right, not a privilege for the technologically elite. Note: The string ie7h37c4qmu5ccza has no known active service. It is used here purely for illustrative purposes of how TorChat identifiers functioned.
In the mid-2000s, as internet surveillance expanded and digital privacy concerns grew, a number of experimental tools emerged to shield communication from prying eyes. Among them was TorChat , a peer-to-peer instant messaging program designed to operate entirely over the Tor network. Though now defunct, TorChat represented a bold attempt to merge usability with strong anonymity, influencing later privacy-focused tools. The Core Design Philosophy TorChat, developed by Bernd Kreuss (prof7bit), was not simply a client that connected to Tor; it was built around Tor’s hidden services. Unlike mainstream messengers (ICQ, MSN Messenger, or early WhatsApp), TorChat used no central servers. Instead, each user generated a unique Tor hidden service address—a long string of random characters ending in .onion . That address served as both identity and routing endpoint.

TL GFX comes in 64-bit VST / VST3 / AU / Standalone.
Windows 11, 10, 8, 7 or Vista (64-bit only);
macOS 10.13 or higher (64-bit only);
Ubuntu 18 or higher (64-bit only);