Our Story
Built from
Comments,
Not Specs.
Everything you need to know about why IBEX exists — and what working professionals actually asked us to fix.
IBEX started with a simple habit: reading comments.
Not reviews — comments. The kind left under YouTube videos, in DJ Facebook groups, on forum threads at 1am after a gig. The kind where working professionals say exactly what they wish someone would fix.
A few things kept coming up.
Lights getting kicked and soaked.
Wedding venues are unpredictable. Drunk guests stumble. Drinks get spilled. Floors get crowded. Most wireless uplights are rated IP20 — which means they handle nothing. DJs started asking for higher ingress protection not because they work outdoors, but because a reception hall with 150 guests and an open bar is its own kind of hazardous environment.
The indicator light problem.
On most uplights, the wireless sync LED blinks continuously during operation — bright enough to be visible across a room, and directly in the sightline of guests. The workaround that spread through the DJ community was a piece of black gaffer tape over the lens. It works, but it also means you can no longer see your sync status. DJs were asking for a simple fix: move the indicator, or hide it by default and surface it only when needed.
Cables as the real constraint.
The pitch for wireless uplighting is freedom of placement — no more running cables along walls, no more venue restrictions. But if the rest of the fixture's design assumes a fixed, controlled environment, you're only solving half the problem.
Ready to Gig Anywhere?
Wireless DMX. IP65 Rated. Zero setup required.