Rendergeist Pulse opens as a free audio-reactive visualizer
Bennash released Rendergeist Pulse for free and used it on multi-minute audio-reactive videos including Super Super Saturday and The Longer the Road. The release turns beat-synced motion graphics into a reusable tool instead of a one-off experiment.

TL;DR
- Bennash opened bennash's free-to-use post for Rendergeist Pulse on June 6, framing it as a reusable audio-reactive visualizer rather than a one-off render.
- The first public demo, bennash's Super Super Saturday clip, ran more than three minutes and showed Pulse driving dense beat-synced motion across a square-format video.
- A second same-day example, bennash's The Longer the Road post, pushed the tool into another multi-minute piece and tied the visuals to a different song and theme.
- Outside the posts themselves, Ben Nash's site says he is building AI-driven creative workflow applications, which gives Pulse a little more weight than a weekend experiment.
You can watch Super Super Saturday, jump straight to The Longer the Road, and see Ben Nash's site quietly describe his current focus as AI-driven creative workflow applications. For creative people, the interesting part is the format shift: Bennash is publishing finished music-video-length outputs while also saying the tool behind them is free to use.
Rendergeist Pulse
Bennash announced Rendergeist Pulse inside the rollout post for Super Super Saturday, then followed with a separate free-to-use link post that stripped the message down to availability.
That two-step release matters because it separates the artifact from the tool. One post sells the aesthetic, the other says the visualizer is open for anyone to try.
Multi-minute demos
The launch came with two examples on the same day, and both were long enough to read as finished pieces instead of short proof clips.
- Super Super Saturday runs about 3 minutes and 22 seconds.
- The Longer the Road runs about 3 minutes and 15 seconds.
- Both posts call the effects audio-reactive.
- The Longer the Road adds Bennash's own framing for the track, "about growing into a man."
That is a nice little flex for a free release. Pulse is being introduced through sustained sequences, not a five-second loop.
Ben Nash's tool-building push
The clearest web source beyond X is Ben Nash's homepage, which is still in beta but says he is preparing a new portfolio around "design, code, and AI" and lists "AI-Driven Creative Workflow Applications" as a current focus.
That does not document Pulse directly, but it does place the release inside a broader creator-tools agenda. For now, the most concrete public record is still the pair of demo posts and the short free-access note.