I must admit I'm late to the chorus pedal table. I have the standard MXR chorus pedal which I messed around with here and there, but never actually gave a proper chance in my set-up. Then, everything changes. I find myself in the audience at Zakk Sabbath on his European tour 2025, being pummelled by his violent (and yet, somehow, beautiful) guitar tone. It was wide. It was thick. It was clear. It was like being washed by flurries of notes all wearing steel toe capped boots. I had to find out what he was using on his pedalboard. Turns out I'm an idiot for NOT being on board the Black Label chorus nuclear submarine! This pedal has a crystal-clear sound; I'm running it in my FX loop straight from the send, into a Boss SDE3000 digital delay unit, back into the return. I've been working on my tone a lot recently, you see. My studio is crammed with ridiculously good Marshall amps and cabinets; several JCM900s, a JTM45, a Silver Jubilee 25/55 reissue, among others. I decided to use one of those AB-Y pedals (i.e. one input to two outputs) so that I could plug into the front of two valve heads. which I'm running into two 8-ohm cabs each (four cabs, so sixteen glorious Celestions all firing at once!) This brings me onto why the Wylde Audio Chorus loses one star, and I'm being extremely pedantic here although it would be THE perfect chorus pedal if this one feature was included. I can run the SDE-3000 with two amps in a parallel mode; two different delay settings. The annoying thing is I can't have the Wylde Chorus in two FX loops at the same time. Only one input. Hence the reason I've taken a star off, but, again, this is pedantic. It's just an excuse for me to buy two of these pedals. It's that good. Plus, look at that bullseye graphic. If you're looking for a fantastic chorus pedal which looks the part, look no further.