Watch Me Die Inside examines discomfort and disillusionment on new EP ‘Infinity Fall III’

There is a clear sense of purpose behind Watch Me Die Inside’s new three-track EP. Instead of treating heaviness as an end in itself, ‘Infinity Fall III’ uses modern metal, atmosphere and contrast to explore self-doubt, routine, emotional numbness and the uneasy process of recognising when familiar comforts have become limiting.

Across ‘Uneasy’, ‘Boring’ and its title-track, the EP develops as a compact psychological study. Each track approaches a different form of internal tension, while the wider release maintains a consistent mood of uncertainty and examination.

‘Uneasy’ is concerned with the loss of confidence in one’s own thoughts and perceptions. Its premise is simple but effective, capturing the exhausting state of a mind that no longer feels entirely dependable. Musically, the tension between heavier passages and more spacious, cinematic elements gives that instability a convincing physical presence.

While ‘Boring’ turns towards repetition and the possibility that comfort can quietly become restrictive. It’s perhaps the EP’s most immediately relatable idea: the slow erosion of purpose through habits that are safe, familiar and increasingly difficult to question. The artist approaches that theme without much sentimentality, allowing the track’s weight and controlled atmosphere to carry much of the emotional argument.

The closing ‘Infinity Fall III’ brings these concerns together without pretending to resolve them neatly. Its focus is less on triumph than recognition, presenting clarity as something potentially painful rather than automatically liberating. And that restraint is important. The song avoids the familiar arc in which suffering inevitably leads to empowerment, leaving us instead with something more ambiguous and arguably more believable.

Throughout the EP, the musical language sits between contemporary metal and cinematic sound design. Dense guitars and forceful dynamics are balanced by quieter sections that create room for tension to accumulate. The production appears designed around contrast, with silence and restraint playing meaningful roles alongside the more abrasive moments.

In all, ‘Infinity Fall III’ is a focused and thoughtfully constructed release from an artist clearly interested in more than surface-level aggression. Its three tracks are concise, conceptually linked and emotionally consistent, offering a dark but considered exploration of what happens when certainty, routine and self-perception begin to fracture.

It may not provide catharsis in the traditional sense, but that appears to be precisely the point.