A speaker built like a monument — and just as hard to ignore.
Result — drop one, gone in 72 hours.
01 — The brief
MONOLITH built a portable speaker that genuinely out-punches gear three times its price — then sold it in a box that looked like a phone charger. The hardware was a flex. The brand was a shrug.
Their buyers are 17 to 23. They don't read spec sheets — they screenshot objects they want on the shelf. The brief: "Make people want it before they've even heard it."
If it doesn't look loud sitting still, it isn't loud enough.
02 — The idea
Make it a monolith. One slab, one button, no app — an object so blunt and so heavy it reads as pure confidence from across the room.
Brutalism, but want-able: the warmth lives in the proportion and the weight, not in a pile of logos. We stripped it back to the one shape a teenager would actually put on a shelf and film.



The product film: one slow pan down the slab, lit like a sculpture — no feature list, no UI, just the object. Reduced-motion holds it still.
03 — The work
Fig. 01 — Drop hero / the slab, lit like a monument

Four finishes, one monolith
Colorways · hairline captions only

01 · Blackout — the matte-black flagship

02 · Bone — the chalk-white one

03 · Gunmetal — the cold gray one

04 · Acid — the one that glows
04 — The result
to sell out drop one
apps to download. ever. one button.
resale premium, week one
That’s the six. Back to —