FVDED 2026: Day 2 Must-See Acts

By Ryan Hayes

Some festivals are built around the names at the top of the poster. FVDED has increasingly become something else entirely —a place where discovery and nostalgia coexist, where familiar favourites share space with artists on the verge of defining the next era of dance music. 2026 marks the beginning of FVDED’s confident new era, and there is no looking back.

As the festival returns to Holland Park for another summer, one thing feels certain: Blueprint continues to lean into curiosity. Beyond the marquee names lies a deep roster of artists shaping the current moment in dance music and hinting at where the culture is headed next. Unapologetically tuned to movement FVDED rewards those willing to arrive early, wander between stages, and trust the process.

Without further ado, these are the four artists we think deserve a spot on your day 2 schedule.

Oppidan

Oppidan’s rise to prominence within the UK Garage scene has been singular, marked not only by her production prowess but also by her technical abilities behind the decks. She has evolved the traditional garage sound, taking the genre's signature shuffle and basslines and injecting them with fresh energy. Her tracks feel effortless—combining playful, bouncy grooves, infectious vocal chops, and irresistible momentum that keeps festival audiences moving. Come for the energy, leave a fan.

Breakout Release: MR. SANDMAN

On Repeat: hold tight

Effin

Effin’s productions are unique. Each release is stamped with an indelible sonic signature. A fresh take is rare within EDM’s trend-chasing nature, and that is exactly what allowed Effin to break through. His rise has been fuelled by a sound that feels both nostalgic and original, quickly establishing him as one of bass music's fastest-rising names. Drawing inspiration from vintage analog aesthetics and combining them with modern dubstep's heaviest tendencies, his productions are instantly recognizable. Effin has built a style entirely his own, balancing inventive sampling, technical sound design, and raw energy without ever sacrificing personality. If you're looking for bass music that pushes beyond the genre's usual boundaries, put Effin at the forefront of your festival experience.

Breakout Release: Cheese

On Repeat: Ups & Downs (with Tape B) –honestly just listen to his Daydreams LP all the way through. It’s a vibe.

In his own words—why this set’s one you won’t want to miss:

It’s my first time playing FVDED! Canada repeatedly has some of the best crowds that are open to anything and everything - my set is filled to the brim with flips of my biggest songs and IDs of new ones. Really want to go for some ups and downs (intended) on this one - really vibey moments and then some crazy energy edits. Going to be a blast.
— Effin

ALLEYCVT

ALLEYCVT's original productions blend sultry pop-leaning vocals with heavyweight drops and deadly intricate electro-inspired sound design. It is an effortless balance of melody and aggression that allows her to stand out from the pack of rising bass acts. Just when a track pulls you in with an infectious melody, she's ready to flip the switch and unleash pure chaos. Come prepared to experience excessive bass face, captivating vocal hooks, and massive energy.

Breakout Release: FALL INTO YOU

On Repeat: ALIVE

In her own words—why this set’s one you won’t want to miss:

I’m really excited for FVDED this year, this will be my first time playing this festival! Every time I build a set months after a headline tour, my sets seem to evolve and become more refined, I feel like that’s exactly where I’m at right now. I’m so excited to come back to Canada again and experience the amazing energy you guys have!
— ALLEYCVT

ODD MOB

Over the last thirteen-plus years, Odd Mob's rise from Australian club favourite to global dance music heavyweight has been a story of persistence, with true international prominence not arriving until the release of Left to Right in 2022. Four years later, Odd Mob sits at the forefront of house music's new wave of talent. What makes his trajectory particularly impressive is that the momentum never stalled; each successive release has only further cemented his status as one of the genre's defining modern acts. His genre-blurring approach utilizes house to its fullest extent as an umbrella, seamlessly integrating tech and bass influences. His sets are built around infectious grooves, smart vocal sampling, and a genuine sense of fun. If you're looking for one of the surest bets for dancefloor satisfaction all weekend, start here.

Breakout Release: Left to Right

On Repeat: Losing Control

FVDED 2026 is about more than just checking headliners off a list. It's about discovery, connection, and the moments you never saw coming. This year, give yourself permission to wander. Catch the artist whose name you've never heard, follow the crowd toward a stage you weren't planning to visit, and trust your curiosity. The future of dance music isn't found in a single set—it reveals itself across an entire weekend of unexpected moments. Whether you're there for the music, the community, or the collective escape that only festivals can provide, FVDED 2026 is an opportunity to experience something new. Your weekend, built one set at a time.

No Looking Back: How FVDED 2026 Signals a New Era for Blueprint

By Ryan Hayes

A Festival Leaning Into Momentum

After returning for two years, FVDED’s 2026 lineup feels less like a course correction designed to secure the festival’s future and more like a confident affirmation of what it was always meant to be. In hindsight, the signs were already there—2025 began nudging in this direction—but the progress was necessarily incremental after a dazzling, mainstream-heavy 2024. With 2026, Blueprint finally puts all its cards on the table.

Fisher and Dom Dolla are, by far, the safest and most bankable bets on the poster
— Ryan Hayes


Next year’s lineup is built around momentum—dominated by artists actively shaping the current moment rather than living off past peaks. Blueprint’s booking philosophy is clear: the dance floor comes first, and artists with viral, grassroots-grown fandoms eclipse the importance of traditional commercial success. 2026 is unapologetically tuned to what’s moving diehard EDM fans right now—the kind who book flights for thoughtfully curated events. It’s a reaffirmation that Blueprint is once again dialed in to where EDM’s true fanbase has always lived—on the outskirts of mainstream culture.

The lineup marks a shift back towards Blueprint’s historic highs, when their bookings were consistently ahead of the curve instead of chasing it. It’s a clear message to the public: FVDED is now established enough, after a two-year rebirth, that it no longer needs to pander to commercial legacy. To some, 2026 may read as a year with less obvious star power—but it’s one of the most accurate reflections of the current scene the festival has presented in at least a decade. You may not recognize every name on the poster yet, but trust FVDED. Trust Blueprint. Buy tickets. Explore the breadth of the roster. Prepare over the six months leading into the weekend. This lineup is it.

The Headliners: A Statement of Intent

While Fisher and Dom Dolla are, by far, the safest and most bankable bets on the poster—and that’s not a criticism—their combined 22.7M monthly Spotify listeners stand in sharp contrast to last year’s top two billings, which totaled 50.2M, more than double the global reach. That said, Fisher and Dom are perfect representations of modern house at its most accessible, recognizable, and festival-ready. They may cast a narrower net than past headliners, but their fanbases are more active—and far more likely to show up. A higher level of commercial recognition no longer guarantees higher ticket sales, just as radio hits no longer make or break an artist. The landscape has shifted, and these headliners reflect that shift—the next generation of headliners will ensure FVDED remains commercially viable without feeling regressive.

FVDED’s new philosophy continues with Mau P, Knock2, and Disco Lines—all artists who have risen to prominence in the 2020s. Whether it’s Mau P’s groove, Knock2’s chaotic, bass-driven enthusiasm, or Disco Lines’ unforgettable hooks, these bookings point directly to where younger audiences are gravitating. They represent true crossover—digital discovery that translates seamlessly into physical turnout—and it’s exactly what modern festivals need to survive.

Big shoutout to Nia Archives, who—until FVDED’s lineup dropped—had eluded my knowledge but now stands out as a particularly bold booking.
— Ryan Hayes

Then there’s GRiZ—a personal favourite and perhaps the biggest headliner gamble. It may be a stretch, but for a loyal group of diehards, he’s the emotional anchor of the entire lineup. Returning after a two-year hiatus, his presence carries a surprising amount of weight. There’s been a clear push to reintroduce him to the scene, acting as a soft rebrand that positions him as a universal headliner. With releases dating back fifteen years—longer than anyone else on the 2026 roster—he now occupies the legacy slot. But that stature is new for GRiZ, and he bends the norms of a classic golden-age headliner. Sonically, he blends bass music with soul, funk, and genuine charismatic warmth. He brings heart, and a deeply dedicated fanbase. He may not carry the same sway as names that have historically topped a FVDED poster, but he has the talent—and you’ll undoubtedly walk away a fan.

The New Wave: What the Rest of the Lineup Says

Beyond the headliners is where FVDED 2026 truly comes into focus. The depth of the lineup is proof of a mission statement rooted in cultural relevance, and this is where Blueprint’s future-thinking approach crystalizes.

Artists like Marlon Hoffstadt, Odd Mob, OMNOM, Notion, & Linska represent the festival’s bracket of rising house and techno stars—the talent is global, the soundscape is diverse, and each artist has cut their teeth and proven they’re built to handle dense crowds at high-energy stages.

Nia Archives, Hedex, MPH, and Oppidan stand out as Blueprint’s deliberate embrace of UK-influenced bass and genre-bending artists. If you aren’t already familiar with their work, dive in and dig around—it will surely reward your curiosity. These bookings push beyond bland, North America–centric festival norms. Big shoutout to Nia Archives, who—until FVDED’s lineup dropped—had eluded my knowledge but now stands out as a particularly bold booking. She’s described her sound as a blend of chaotic, intense jungle with deep emotion; it didn’t exactly clear anything up for me, but it feels perfectly apt—and her vocals add a soulful layer to every production.

Levity B2B Wooli is a big swing and a calculated risk. The acts stand on the opposite ends of the bass music spectrum, and their set is sure to prove a collision of thick dubstep basslines, distorted growling drops, and melodic bass bounce. Purposeful chaos designed to accentuate the interplay between tension and euphoria.

TroyBoi stands out as a wildcard, having made his FVDED debut a decade ago in 2016. His style has continued to evolve, proving him to be an artist who refuses to be boxed in. He may be a legacy act at this point, but one content to operate on the fringe—constantly exploring sonic variation.

A Different Bet — FVDED vs the rest

When viewed alongside the only other major Canadian EDM festival to have fully announced its 2026 lineup—VELD—FVDED’s strategy stands in sharp contrast. VELD leans on proven star power and legacy bookings to cast the widest possible net—the standard festival formula. FVDED, by comparison, is making a more deliberate, future-facing bet on momentum, relevance, and fan trust—though it remains to be seen whether the broader festival-going audience is ready for that shift.

This isn’t a knock on VELD; it’s simply a different philosophy. Much like Shambhala, which routinely sells out without relying on top-heavy star power, FVDED is solidifying its boutique identity and betting that vibe, curation, and community loyalty matter more than instant name recognition. By prioritizing artists with active, invested fanbases and a lineup that rewards exploration, FVDED isn’t just protecting its legacy—it’s ensuring it evolves with the scene. VELD may be the more bankable play today, but FVDED’s 2026 is clearly attempting to build the kind of trust that can sustain a festival for the next decade.

What This Lineup Says About FVDED’s Future

Everyone talks about the “golden age” of EDM, but the fixation, propelled by aging fans missing the good old days, dilutes the current scene. FVDED 2026 isn’t chasing nostalgia, it’s staking a forward-facing claim that it understands where electronic music is going with the wide-eyed hope that the “golden age” lives.

Dominated by a diverse array of house, sprinkled with poignant bass acts, and amplified by UK and European club culture influences. This is a lineup designed for movement, for crowds that want to dance, not just film drops.

FVDED separates itself from the pack—not by playing it safe, but by betting on the future. This is a new wave of curation that returns Blueprint to its heights, and a clear signal of where the brand is headed next.

2026 isn’t about who was the biggest ten years ago—it’s about who matters right now.

And that’s a very good place for FVDED to be.