When the song dropped two days later, it didn't just get views—it started a "Beast" challenge. Thousands of creators began using the sound, proving that sometimes, the "type beats" uploaded for free are the ones that end up defining a whole new sound.
"This beat is literally a monster," the message read. "I’m in the booth right now. Watch what I do to this." free_che_romani_type_beat_beast
Within minutes, the notifications started humming. Usually, it was just other producers swapping kits, but this time was different. A "Verified" checkmark popped up in his DMs. It was a local underground rapper with a growing buzz. When the song dropped two days later, it
Kael didn’t sleep that night. By 4 AM, he received a rough cut. The rapper hadn't just used the beat; he had wrestled with it. The track was frantic, shifting between Romani-style melodic runs and Che’s signature gritty delivery. It felt alive, like something that shouldn't be "free." "I’m in the booth right now
He uploaded it to his channel with the tag: [FREE] Che x Romani Type Beat - "BEAST" .
The studio was a cramped basement in Jersey, smelling of stale caffeine and overheating circuits. Kael, known online as "V0id," stared at the waveform on his screen. He’d just finished a track he titled —a chaotic blend of distorted 808s and ethereal synths, specifically crafted for the melodic, glitchy flow of artists like Che and Romani .