The Building Blocks of Distorted Tone
It’s no surprise that gain pedals are one of the most popular and talked-about effect categories in the guitar world. Since the dawn of the electric guitar, these pedals play a central role in defining a player’s sound.
In this article, we will guide you through the core characteristics of boost, overdrive, and fuzz pedals, how they sound, react, and when to use each one. By the end, you’ll have a clearer idea of which gain pedal (or combination) fits your playing style, rig, and the tones you’re after. Let’s get started!

Understanding Your Options: What Each Gain Pedal Does
Boost Pedals
Boost pedals are your most natural and subtle option. This effect can help you achieve a natural crunch tone without getting in the way of your guitar’s tonal characteristics. The result is even more interesting if you use it with a tube amp.
Another popular way of using boost pedals is to give other gain/dirt pedals a slight push. This trick can completely alter the characteristics of an overdrive or fuzz pedal, or help your tone cut through the mix.
Why Use a Boost Pedal?
- Adds volume without drastically changing your tone
- Pushes tube amps into natural overdrive
- Enhances sustain and presence for solos
- Can tighten or shape the sound of overdrive and fuzz pedals
- Great for stacking and experimenting with gain stages
Boost Pedal Recommendations
Spicy Pedals Scorpion Pepper Sting

The Scorpion Pepper Sting is transparent and won’t step in the way of your natural tone, but it can get extremely loud! This clear boost is excellent for pushing the harmonics of overdrive and fuzz pedals.
Overdrive Pedals
As you already know, overdrive is the most popular effect among guitarists. These pedals emulate the warm, natural breakup of a tube amp being pushed past its limits, which is the backbone of blues and rock ‘n’roll.
Today, there’s a huge variety of overdrive flavors on the market: from transparent drives that preserve your guitar’s character, to mid-heavy screamers that cut through any mix, to amp-in-a-box pedals that recreate the feel of iconic tube amps.
Why Use an Overdrive Pedal?
- Recreates the sound of a cranked tube amp at lower volumes
- Adds extra sustain to your tone
- Responds well to playing dynamics and guitar volume adjustments
- Works great as a standalone drive or for stacking with other pedals
- Available in many flavors, from transparent to mid-focused to amp-style tones
Overdrive Pedal Recommendations
Spicy Pedals Jalapeño Screamer Verde

As you might’ve guessed, the Jalapeño Screamer Verde is inspired by the famous “Screamer” pedal, particularly the TS808 circuit, with a few well-deserved upgrades to give it more bass and more bite than ever. Make sure to check the Amarillo and Rojo versions as well.
Fuzz Pedals
From Jimi Hendrix to Jack White, the fuzz pedal has been a staple in many legendary guitarists’ pedalboards. Unlike boost or overdrive, the fuzz is all about extremes: it transforms your signal into a thick, saturated wall of sound with buzzy, compressed character.
As is the case with boost and overdrive, there are many, many flavors of fuzz: some sound more vintage and velvety, some can turn your tone into sputtery chaos. The rawness and unpredictability are what make fuzz so appealing.,
Why Use a Fuzz Pedal?
- Delivers a thick, saturated tone that cuts through the mix
- Perfect for raw, expressive, and experimental sounds
- Adds a vintage vibe to your playing
- Pairs well with single-coil pickups and low-wattage amps
- Offers unique textures you can’t get from overdrive or distortion
Fuzz Pedal Recommendations
Spicy Pedals Big Ancho Fuzz

The Big Ancho Fuzz takes inspiration from classics from the ’60s and ’70s. This silicon-based fuzz delivers dirty vintage tones while giving you a great deal of versatility. It pairs really well with Spicy Pedals’ boosts and overdrives.
Tips on Stacking Gain Pedals and Popular Combinations
As we’ve mentioned before, stacking gain pedals can help you create a tone that’s unique to you. You can unlock new textures by combining different types of gain, like a boost into an overdrive or a fuzz into a low-gain drive. The best point is that there are so many combinations to try.
Boost + Overdrive
This is one of the most popular combinations. To push your overdrive pedal further, you can add a clear boost in front of it. The result is more gain, sustain, and a touch of extra saturation. Placing the boost before the overdrive shapes the character of the drive itself, while placing it after increases volume without adding more distortion.
Fuzz + Overdrive
Another popular combination, placing an overdrive before or after your fuzz pedal, can completely change the flavor of your tone. Want your fuzz to sound smoother and tame it? Place your overdrive before. Want a thicker, heavier tone? Place it after.
Overdrive + Overdrive
This can be one of the most powerful pedal combinations. Combining two overdrive pedals will create a completely unique tone that blends the characteristics and dynamic response of each pedal, especially when you explore each unit’s tone stack. This pair is all about experimentation.
For more recommendations, check out our complete guide on pedal stacking at DeathCloud Pedals.

Conclusion
Choosing the right gain pedal comes down to understanding your tone goals and how each effect shapes your sound. Nowadays, a world of possibilities is waiting at your feet, so don’t be afraid to stack and mix different gain units until you find a setup that feels uniquely yours!
Written by Ian Sniesko from DeathCloud, curating the finest guitar pedals for tone chasers and gear heads alike.