The original Strymon combo vs Keeley
Strymon Flint by Strymon. Category: Reverb. Type: Multi. Compare with structured votes from real players — filtered by amp type, pickups, genre, gain usage, and playing context.
Keeley Hydra by Keeley. Category: Reverb. Type: Multi. See how it stacks up against Strymon Flint based on ownership experience.
Tell us which pedal wins — Strymon Flint or Keeley Hydra. Vote with your amp, pickups, genre, and gain context. Every vote makes the comparison more useful.
Head-to-head guitar pedal comparisons backed by structured votes from players who own them. No hype — just signal.
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Overdrive, fuzz, boost, delay, univibe, and reverb — find the matchup that matters to you.
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The Strymon Flint is a multi-mode reverb offering several reverb types in one enclosure. The Keeley Hydra is a multi-mode reverb offering several reverb types in one enclosure. They come from different builders with different design philosophies, but they end up on the same pedalboards often enough that this comparison matters. Understanding how each creates and sustains its reverb tail is the key to picking the right one for your rig.
Both pedals trace their DNA to the multi circuit. That means familiar territory — but the Flint and Hydra each bring their own perspective to the design. Small changes in clipping, EQ shaping, and headroom add up to noticeably different feel under your fingers.
This battle comes down to what you need from your reverb — trail character, how much the reverb colors your dry signal, and ambient capability. The votes from players who own both tell the real story.
Your rig is the variable that matters most here. Reverb sits at the end of most chains for a reason — it defines the space your entire rig lives in. A bright reverb can lift a dark amp, and a warm reverb can tame a brittle one. Every vote on ToneBattles includes amp type, pickup configuration, genre, and ownership status. Use the filters below to see how players with setups like yours have voted.
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