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‘Karmic Justice’ Is the Answer AKASHIC GODS Found After Heartbreak

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‘Karmic Justice’ Is the Answer AKASHIC GODS Found After Heartbreak

There’s a odd kind of pain that comes not just from losing someone, but from realizing the version of them you loved was never real. AKASHIC GODS knows that feeling well, and instead of sitting in it, she made “Karmic Justice,” a track that drops today, March 20, 2026, and hits like a reckoning you didn’t know you needed.

The song runs exactly 3 minutes and 33 seconds, and that precision feels right. “Karmic Justice” isn’t sprawling or self-indulgent. It’s focused. Gritty guitar riffs anchor the thing while atmospheric synths push it somewhere darker and more cinematic. Producer Carlone Lewis, who also co-handles mixing duties, gives the track a dark, cinematic edge without letting it lose the rawness that makes it land. The vocals are ethereal but controlled, never tipping into melodrama when the emotion is already doing its job. What she’s built here is an alternative indie rock track that uses restraint as a weapon.

‘Karmic Justice’ by AKASHIC GODS

The subject matter is about as personal as it gets. AKASHIC GODS has been open about the song’s origins: a relationship that ended not in a clean break but in betrayal, the kind that leaves you questioning your own perception of reality. That’s the emotional wound “Karmic Justice” is working through, and what’s interesting is how she chooses to handle it. There’s no revenge fantasy here. No scorched-earth anger. The song’s power comes from something quieter and more unsettling, a trust that cosmic order will do what human confrontation never can.

That’s the philosophical core of the track, and it’s what separates it from the average breakup song. AKASHIC GODS leans into faith and the concept of a higher power not as a coping mechanism but as a genuine belief system. The assurance embedded in the lyrics isn’t “I hope you get what you deserve.” It’s closer to “I know you will.” That distinction matters. One is wishful thinking. The other is conviction, and it changes the emotional weight of everything around it.

The official music video, out now, makes that distinction visual. It’s a striking piece of work, shot with deep reds, black, and green creating a moody, high-stakes palette throughout. AKASHIC GODS appears in a spiked headpiece and black leather, projecting something between a warrior and a prophet. Fast-cut editing and digital glitch effects match the industrial sound of the track, while imagery of statues, crosses, tornadoes, and figures in samurai-style masks keeps things rooted in the mythological rather than the mundane. It’s not a breakup video in any conventional sense. It’s more like a visual tribunal.

That mythological sensibility is central to who AKASHIC GODS is as an artist. She rebuilt her entire creative identity in 2024, stepping away from a dance music career that had earned her support from names like David Guetta and Fatboy Slim, and pivoting toward indie punk rock and avant-garde new wave. Her artist bio puts it plainly: a “21st Century secret love child of Grace Jones and Kurt Cobain,” and it’s not as outlandish as it sounds. There’s the same kind of fearlessness there, a refusal to occupy any lane that feels too comfortable.

“Karmic Justice” is her third single and the clearest statement yet of where this project is heading. Her debut, “Gods and Machines,” climbed to No. 2 on the UK Talk Radio Hot 100. Her follow-up, “Weapons in Space,” went to No. 1 and held the spot for three consecutive weeks in December 2025. The single had already been generating attention before today’s release, with AKASHIC GODS interviewed at the UK film premiere of sci-fi film “Dream Hacker” in January 2026, where she spoke about the track ahead of its release. The momentum is real, and it’s built on tracks that have something to say rather than just something to sell.

What AKASHIC GODS wants listeners to take from her music is, by her own account, genuine and a little ambitious. She talks about using song to encourage critical thinking, to promote values like faith, accountability, and spiritual awareness. Those aren’t things most rock artists are explicitly reaching for, but she’s not most rock artists. The didactic ambition in her work doesn’t make it preachy, because the emotion is always doing the heavier lifting. You feel the philosophy before you consciously process it.

“Karmic Justice” functions best as a permission slip. Permission to let go of the need to control outcomes. Permission to stop carrying responsibility for someone else’s deception. Permission to believe that actions have consequences even when you’re not around to see them land. That’s the liberation the song is pointing toward, and it’s a harder thing to arrive at than anger is. Anger is easy. Faith is the work.

You can find AKASHIC GODS across her platforms: on Instagram, TikTok, X, and Facebook, with a full press feature available at Just News International. Her debut album, also titled “Gods and Machines,” is a 10-track record due this summer. If “Karmic Justice” is the preview, it’s going to be worth the wait.

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