Marshmello

Houston Reels
Houston Reels
There is a saying that work should not be mixed with pleasure. The CEO of Marshmello Printing Press, Mike Ross, seems to be doing the exact opposite of this. Isioma becomes a huge victim of this power-drunk CEO. How is an innocent, naïve girl supposed to navigate her life with work, friendship, pleasure, and love mixed into one without messing up the grey lines? Read Houston Reels to find out.
10
10 Chapters
THE BILLIONAIRE'S FOREVER CONTRACT
THE BILLIONAIRE'S FOREVER CONTRACT
Dearest gentle readers, This is NOT YOUR regular BILLIONAIRE ROMANCE. PROCEED WITH CAUTION Jason Rodrigues did not want a wife, he considered women as tools to be used and discarded until he is stuck between obeying his father’s will or losing the company. The rule to him was simple… find a girl, make her a surrogate and have her bear his heir but nothing is ever simple in any love story. Elizabeth turns Jason’s world upside down and leaves him wondering if having a wife is such a terrible idea. <<>> Lucien Rodrigues is a playboy and unlike his brother, he refuses to abide by any rule until he crosses the path of formidable fashion designer, Mara Sinclair. Now he wonders if the player has become the played instead. <<>> Diana Rodrigues wants out of the glamour life. Living under the shadow of both her brothers have not exactly been an easy feat for her and so she escapes to Italy to start her life afresh only she is unaware of the danger that lurks in the form of Dante Russo who will stop at nothing to avenge his brother and wreck havoc on the Rodrigues family. And what better way to begin than defiling their little princess, Diana.
9.8
166 Chapters
The Lycan King's Rejected Daughter
The Lycan King's Rejected Daughter
“You are nothing, and you are no one. I will never have a human as a mate. I Jarek Hudson reject you as my mate and my future Luna,” he says to me with no emotion. “Now accept it,” he demands. Keena is a human among Lycans and werewolves. At least that is until she turns 18 and her powers begin to manifest. Keena is destined to be a witch. Knowing that she doesn't have a wolf or a lycan her fated mate rejects her. Keena is heart broken and fears a life without a mate until she meets her new body guard, Ward. Ward shows her all of the love and care that a mate should. Will Jarek come around or will Ward win her heart before Jarek can change his? Or will something sinister tear her away from both of them? Book one: Fated to the Enemy Series Book two: Rogue Princess Book three: The Lycan King's Rejected Daughter
9.8
238 Chapters
Even After Death
Even After Death
Olivia Fordham was married to Ethan Miller for three years, but that time could not compare with the ten years he spent loving his first love, Marina Carlton. On the day that she gets diagnosed with stomach cancer, Ethan happens to be accompanying Marina to her children's health check-up. She doesn't make any kind of fuss, only leaving quietly with the divorce agreement. However, this attracts an even more fervent retribution. It seems Ethan only ever married Olivia to take revenge for what happened to his little sister. While Olivia is plagued by her sickness, he holds her chin and says coldly, "This is what your family owes me." Now, she has no family and no future. Her father becomes comatose after a car accident, leaving her with nothing to live for. Thus, she hurls herself from a building. "The life my family owes will now be repaid." At this, Ethan, who's usually calm, panics while begging for Olivia to come back as if he's in a state of frenzy …
9
1674 Chapters
Love Slave to the Mafia Boss's Passion
Love Slave to the Mafia Boss's Passion
[WARNING: MATURE CONTENT] "Each time you break a rule; I'll claim a part of your body as mine" Forced to marry the heir of the largest mafia syndicate to pay for her parent's debt and her grandmother's hospital bills. "Live with my son for 30 days, if you don't fall in love with him, I'll cancel this contract." Can Malissa live with the handsome, hot and dominating Hayden for 30 days without falling for his charms? However, there are rules to living with this lusty monster and as Malissa breaks then, she learns of pleasures that she never knew existed. As his touches set her on fire, her heart starts to melt. But does the two have a future together when Hayden is in love with someone else and Malissa cannot get over her ex-boyfriend? READ NOW to find out!
9.5
417 Chapters
Her Return, His Regret
Her Return, His Regret
Everything changed when his Ex-girlfriend returned….. Larisa Bennett thought the news of her pregnancy would improve her relationship with her husband, Ryan Kingsley. However, before she could tell him the pleasant news, his ex-girlfriend, Ivy Williams, reappeared and turned her life upside down. It was like she was starting from zero all over again. Ryan suddenly became distant and detached, his attention now focused on the woman he always loved. Larisa was hit with the reality that Ryan would never love her. She was the third wheel in her own marriage and she was tired. Resorting to the only thing that would set her free, she asked for a divorce but surprisingly, Ryan refused, not wanting to let her go but his actions told a different story. His ex-girlfriend always came first. In a shocking turn of events, everything turned south when Larisa found herself kidnapped at the same time as Ivy. Ryan is faced with a difficult choice. He can only save one. Will he choose to save his wife or ex-girlfriend? What are the consequences of his choice? If he chooses to save Ivy, will he regret it and will it be too late?
9.9
181 Chapters

Where Can Fans Buy Official Marshmello Merchandise?

2 Answers2026-01-24 03:07:23

I get a real thrill tracking down legit artist merch, and Marshmello's stuff is no exception — there are a few reliable places I always check first. The most straightforward spot is Marshmello's official online store (linked from his verified social profiles), which usually carries tees, hoodies, hats, plushies, and limited-edition drops. Beyond the official shop, concert and festival merch booths are gold: when he plays live you can often buy exclusive tour items that never make it online. For wider retail options, authorized sellers like Hot Topic, Urban Outfitters, BoxLunch, Merchbar and some listings on Amazon (sold by official sellers or the artist's store) sometimes stock Marshmello gear, though availability varies by region.

When I’m hunting for things I care about — like signed items or limited drops — I follow Marshmello’s official Instagram, Twitter, and mailing list to catch announcements and preorders. That’s also the best way to avoid knockoffs; always use the store links posted on verified accounts. If you're buying from retailers, double-check seller badges, product photos, and return policies. Concert booths and official store drops sometimes include authenticity tags or special packaging; those are small details I pay attention to when buying for the collection. In-game collaborations (like the Fortnite event) are another route — not physical merchandise, but official digital skins and bundles are a legit part of his branded offerings.

My collecting habit means I keep receipts and take photos of tags when something's special, and I've learned to be wary of too-good-to-be-true deals on resale sites. If it’s limited or a collab item, prices can spike on secondary markets like eBay or Depop — which is great if you want rarities, but check seller ratings. International fans should also check shipping and customs notes on the official store; sometimes regional partners handle distribution. Personally, I love the simplicity of grabbing a hoodie from the official shop and the memory of getting a tour tee straight from the merch table — each piece feels like a little snapshot of the moment I discovered or celebrated a song, and that’s why I keep going back.

Which DJs Influenced The Sound Of Marshmello?

2 Answers2026-01-24 00:12:13

Hearing Marshmello's tracks back-to-back with festival sets and bedroom productions, I can clearly pick out the line of DJs and producers who shaped his sound. At the top of that list for me is Skrillex: the way Marshmello sculpts bass and drop dynamics, especially in his heavier remixes and festival-friendly edits, carries that Skrillex-era influence — crisp transient design, aggressive low-end movement, and contrast between delicate melodic leads and punchy drops. Then there's Deadmau5, whose fingerprints show up in the more progressive, synth-led moments; the use of space, evolving pads, and well-considered chord progressions owe a lot to that house-driven, emotive approach. I hear the marriage of those two schools — gritty sound design plus melodic house structure — throughout Marshmello's catalog.

On a different axis, the future bass and pop-EDM trend plays a huge role. Artists like Porter Robinson and Madeon pushed emotive, almost cinematic melodies into electronic music, and Marshmello adopted that sensibility for radio-ready hooks and vocal-centric tracks. Zedd and Avicii contributed another layer: Zedd’s clean pop-EDM production and Avicii’s gift for earworm songwriting and uplifting arrangements are the reason Marshmello’s songs can sit comfortably on both dance floors and radio playlists. From the trap and bass side, I can also detect elements from RL Grime and Baauer in Marshmello’s earlier releases as he experimented with syncopated hi-hats and heavier sub-bass — those moments gave his work a club-ready edge.

Beyond named DJs, I like to think of Marshmello as a product of a whole ecosystem: the mainstream crossover moves of Calvin Harris and Tiësto, the melodic house warmth of Kaskade, and the textural experimentation of Flume all filtered through his distinctive, playful brand. That diversity explains why he can drop a straight-up future bass banger, a pop duet with a singer-songwriter, or an upbeat festival anthem and have it still feel like "Marshmello." For me, that blend is what made him click early on — familiar building blocks rearranged into something infectiously fun. I still enjoy tracing those influences whenever a new Marshmello track drops; it’s like hearing a remix of genres I love.

When Did Marshmello Release His Breakout Single?

1 Answers2026-01-24 03:54:34

I've got to gush a little — Marshmello's real breakout came with the track 'Alone', which was officially released on May 13, 2016 through the Monstercat label. That little helmeted producer had been turning out remixes and building a mysterious persona beforehand, but 'Alone' was the song that went viral and turned the mystery into mainstream momentum. The song's bright, airy synth hook and deceptively simple emotional hook made it perfect for both festival sets and YouTube/Twitch clips, and the official video and uploads quickly piled up views into the tens and eventually hundreds of millions. It also crossed over onto charts and gave Marshmello his first widely-recognized hit footprint beyond the underground electronic scene.

What I love about that era is how perfectly timed everything felt: streaming and gaming culture were booming, Monstercat's community was hungry for a new face, and Marshmello's anonymity gave fans something to latch onto. 'Alone' struck a balance between euphoric festival energy and an oddly intimate, slightly melancholic vocal refrain — that contrast made it insanely replayable. Once it caught on, big collabs followed: tracks like 'Silence' with Khalid and later pop-leaning hits helped cement the crossover, but it was definitely 'Alone' that opened the door. The song became a staple in DJ mixes, a meme seed on social platforms, and a way for people who didn't normally care about EDM to discover him. For a lot of folks, that was the moment Marshmello stopped being a clever internet mystery and started feeling like a mainstream music fixture.

On a personal level, I still get a thrill from hearing the first few notes of 'Alone' — it's a timestamp of a very specific pop-electronic moment for me. The track's energy makes it great for everything from commuting to gaming sessions to late-night hangs with friends, and even years later it has this uncanny ability to sound both nostalgic and fresh depending on where you hear it. So, short story: May 13, 2016 is the release date that kicked off Marshmello's big breakout, and the ripple effects from that single are still easy to spot in his career trajectory and in how EDM mixed with mainstream pop in the late 2010s. Pretty wild to watch all unfold, and it still puts a grin on my face when it comes on.

What Inspired The Marshmello Helmet Design?

1 Answers2026-01-24 21:57:24

What a clever piece of branding—Marshmello's helmet is one of those designs that feels instantly familiar and oddly comforting. The helmet itself is a giant, glossy white marshmallow cylinder with simple black Xs for eyes and a wide, friendly smile. On the surface it's playful and almost childlike, but there's a lot of strategy behind that whimsy. The mask taps into a long tradition in electronic music of performers using anonymity as part of the act—think of Daft Punk or Deadmau5—so Marshmello adopted the helmet both as a statement and a tool: a way to create a memorable icon, control the narrative around identity, and make the music the centerpiece rather than celebrity drama.

Looking closer, the design choices are brilliant in their simplicity. A marshmallow is soft, nonthreatening, and nostalgic, which makes the character approachable to a huge range of fans—from kids to festival veterans. The X-eyes and smile read like an oversized emoji, leaning right into internet culture where simple, expressive faces stick in peoples' minds. Practically speaking, the helmet is a dream for merch and visuals—it's easy to reproduce on T-shirts, hats, stickers, and massive LED screens, and it translates perfectly into the kind of family-friendly, party-ready brand Marshmello embodies. Early versions were DIY and foam-based, but as his profile grew the helmet got more sophisticated, with sturdier materials, better finishes, and sometimes embedded lights so it pops on stage at night.

Beyond aesthetics, the helmet played a role in storytelling and mystique. Keeping his identity hidden in the early days let fans speculate and sparked a viral curiosity that fed into press coverage and memes. That deliberate anonymity also let Marshmello craft a kinder, more inclusive persona—less about ego, more about joy and pure music. Of course there were moments when identity rumors and reveals made headlines, but the helmet persisted as a symbol separate from the person inside it. Seeing him perform—whether in person, on a livestream, or in a crossover like the Fortnite events—the helmet anchors the experience. It’s instantly recognizable in a sea of festival art and becomes a focal point for crowd photos and fan art.

I've always enjoyed the way the helmet balances marketing savvy with genuine charm. It’s smart design that doesn’t feel cynical; it feels playful, like a mascot who wants you to dance. The helmet's simplicity makes it endlessly adaptable and oddly timeless, which is why it’s stayed relevant as Marshmello's career keeps evolving. For me, that smiley marshmallow head sums up the music vibe perfectly: upbeat, uncomplicated, and fun—kind of the musical equivalent of a warm, toasted marshmallow at a late-night bonfire.

Which Songs Made Marshmello Top The EDM Charts?

1 Answers2026-01-24 11:07:04

Marshmello really exploded onto the EDM scene with a handful of tracks that broke out of the festival bubble and pushed him to the top of dance charts around the world. If you’re looking for the songs that truly made him chart-topping, the ones that come to mind are 'Alone', 'Silence' (feat. Khalid), 'Wolves' (with Selena Gomez), 'Friends' (with Anne-Marie), and 'Happier' (with Bastille). Those singles weren’t just club heaters — they crossed over to pop radio, streaming playlists, and Beatport/EDM-specific charts, which is how Marshmello moved from anonymous helmeted producer to household-name collaborator.

' Alon e' was the early signature — so catchy, so meme-ready, and it dominated EDM playlists and festival sets. It gave Marshmello a clear identity and tons of streams and sales that pushed it up the genre charts. 'Silence' showed his pop-leaning instincts, pairing melancholy chords with Khalid’s soulful voice and bringing a different crowd into the fold. 'Wolves' with Selena Gomez felt like the moment EDM met mainstream pop in a huge way; the production was accessible and radio-friendly, and the track did extremely well on both dance and mainstream charts internationally. 'Friends' was a sassy pop-EDM single that smashed in the UK and on pop/dance radio, while 'Happier' became one of his biggest crossover wins — emotional, melodic, and endlessly replayable, it dominated dance/electronic tallies and mainstream charts alike.

What’s cool to me is how these songs topped EDM charts for different reasons: some were festival anthems that DJs played to explode the crowd, others rode radio playlists and streaming algorithms because of star vocalists and tight pop structures. Marshmello’s strategy of collaborating with big-name singers helped a lot — pop stars brought listeners who might not usually dig into EDM, and the results were huge streaming numbers, sync placements, and chart positions on Billboard’s dance/electronic listings, as well as international charts and Beatport. Plus his branding — the mask, the visuals, the YouTube-friendly content — pushed streams even further, meaning the tracks got both EDM cred and mainstream momentum.

Personally, I still go back to a few of these when I want different vibes: 'Alone' for pure festival energy, 'Silence' for late-night chill, and 'Happier' when I need something bittersweet that still slaps. Those songs are the ones that honestly put Marshmello up on the charts and kept him there, and they’re a big part of why his name became synonymous with that crossover EDM-pop sound. If I had to choose a favorite chart-topper, 'Happier' wins for emotional weight and replay value — it always gets me hitting repeat.

How Did Marshmello Collaborate With Fortnite Developers?

2 Answers2026-01-24 02:04:28

That 2019 Marshmello-'Fortnite' moment still feels like one of those pop-culture lightning strikes to me — equal parts silly and brilliant. Epic and Marshmello set up a full-on virtual concert inside the game, transforming the map into an amphitheater and staging a giant Marshmello DJ booth where thousands (eventually over ten million across showings) gathered. It wasn’t just plopping a stage down: Epic built a custom island and used in-game scripting, lighting, and special effects to choreograph a synchronized audiovisual experience so every player saw the same fireworks, camera cuts, and dance cues. The set was pre-recorded and tightly synced to the map events, which let Epic scale the show across multiple servers and time slots without the unpredictability of a live broadcast. On the marketing and product side, the collaboration included branded cosmetics and emotes — Marshmello’s helmet and themed items appeared in the shop — plus social promotion that drove both music streams and player engagement. From a creative angle, Epic didn’t just port a real-world concert into 'Fortnite'; they designed interactive spaces where players could climb, dance, and take screenshots together. That design choice turned passive spectators into active participants. I remember watching avatars bounce in sync, flares going off, and kids trading clips on social media afterward. The whole thing felt like a new kind of shared fandom event, because you were physically in the same virtual space with thousands of strangers enjoying the same show. What thrilled me most was how that collaboration proved what was possible: a music act partnering directly with a game studio to create a bespoke, technically complex event that also served as a promotion for the artist. It paved the way for later shows that pushed visuals and interactivity even further. For someone who loves both electronic music and game spaces, seeing Marshmello’s helmet glow over a digital crowd was weirdly emotional — like a tiny cultural milestone — and I still smile thinking about the goofy, euphoric energy of those dancing avatars.

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