Royalty-Free Music for Gadget Videos
Choose tracks for app store previews, feature reveals, short ads, and mobile demo clips

A gadget video needs music that supports the product without getting in the way.
The viewer is looking at details. The box opening. The screen. The ports. The grip. The sound of a hinge. The product sitting on a desk, in a bag, or in someone’s hand. Music should help the video feel polished while leaving room for those visual details to land.
Pick music around what the gadget is doing on screen
Gadget videos usually move through small visual moments. The music should match the pace of those moments.
An unboxing can start with a clean, steady intro. A close-up sequence may need a tighter rhythm so the cuts feel intentional. A spec section can use a track with light structure, so text overlays and voiceover stay easy to follow.
A good track for a gadget video usually has:
- a clean intro for the first product reveal
- enough rhythm for cuts, turns, and detail shots
- space for voiceover or on-screen specs
- a tone that fits the product category
- a finish that works for a CTA, logo, or end card
A keyboard review, desk setup video, camera accessory reel, smartwatch ad, or portable charger promo should not all sound the same. A sleek metal device may need a minimal electronic track. A creator-focused tool may need something warmer and more casual. A fitness gadget may need more movement.
The goal is simple. The track should make the product feel clear, useful, and easy to understand.
Match the track to the video format
A gadget video for YouTube has different music needs than a short product reel or a paid social ad.
For an unboxing video, use a track that gives the opening a clean pace without making the video feel rushed. Leave room for packaging sounds, first reactions, and spoken notes.
For close-up product shots, pick music with a steady pulse. This helps editors cut between buttons, screens, textures, cable ports, accessories, and hand movements.
For spec videos, choose music that leaves space. If the video shows battery life, dimensions, chipset details, storage, compatibility, or price, the viewer needs to read fast. Busy music can compete with the information.
For lifestyle gadget videos, the track can carry more personality. Show the device in a real setting, such as a desk, gym bag, commute, studio, kitchen, or travel kit. The music should make the product feel usable in that moment.
Check commercial use before you publish
Gadget videos often cross into commercial use fast.
A creator review may include affiliate links. A brand may post the video on its product page. A freelancer may deliver a launch asset to a client. A marketer may run the video as a paid post. Each of those uses needs music with the right permission.
Audiodrome’s license covers these common gadget video needs. You can use licensed tracks in commercial and non-commercial videos, social media posts and ads, monetized online projects, podcasts and video podcasts, live or recorded streams, and client projects.
The key rule is simple: keep the music embedded inside the finished project, such as the video, ad, podcast episode, presentation, or client file. Do not send the raw music track as a separate file.
Before publishing a gadget video, keep these items together:
- the track title
- the license or order confirmation
- the buyer name
- the finished video file
- the client or campaign name, if relevant
That proof pack helps when a platform, client, agency, or brand partner asks where the music came from.
