Media outlets described the sound of
Virtual Self as
trance or
neotrance. They identified inspirations from early 2000s genres such as
speedcore, trance,
jungle,
rave, and
hard trance. Sources noted similarities to rhythm game music, such as
Dance Dance Revolution music, and
keygen music. Robinson wanted to blend different styles of electronic music from the early 2000s, such as
jungle,
trance and
gabber. According to Robinson, he listened to "every" song from 1998 to 2003—a number he claimed to approach 100,000—tagged as trance, jungle,
drum and bass, breaks, and
techno on
Beatport. While he found many of them to be generic and unimpressive, he identified common sonic and structural traits that he could incorporate. Robinson had to research how to authentically recreate sounds from
PC Music's "hyper-modern, complex productions", by looking into early 2000s
sample packs. However, he also stated that he did not want Virtual Self to be exclusively made of references; he tried to include compositional turns that would not be expected in the genres and time period to which he was paying homage. As such, while still using mostly early 2000s sounds, Robinson also tried to implement modern song structures, stating that he wanted to "morph 2001 tropes into a 2017 production sensibility". Robinson also particularly cited
Calvin Harris's 2009 song "
I'm Not Alone" as a heavy inspiration for Virtual Self.
Songs The Virtual Self alias is represented by two characters created by Robinson, Pathselector and Technic-Angel; to establish them as characters, Robinson created a
Twitter account for each. In the EP, the white-dressed, gold-masked Pathselector represents the tracks "
Ghost Voices" and "A.I.ngel (Become God)", while Technic-Angel is a fair-skinned, dark-cloaked harbinger that represents the tracks "Particle Arts", "Key", and "Eon Break". Robinson described Pathselector's songs as neotrance, mid-tempo, and adhering stylistically to trance, while he described Technic-Angel's songs as "maximalist, 170
BPM, crazy hardcore, speedcore, jungle, and
drum and bass". The EP begins with the Technic-Angel track "Particle Arts", which Philip Sherburne of
Pitchfork described as "a 175-BPM juggernaut of trance stabs and
happy-hardcore breaks". According to Andrew Rafter of
DJ Mag, Robinson uses
EDM-styled
drum and bass with
glitch elements. The next track is Pathselector's "
Ghost Voices", which combines
deep house and trance elements while, according to Kat Bein of
Billboard, having "soulful, halftime garage vibes". Sherburne described it as the most contemporary sounding track of the EP. It is followed by "A.I.ngel (Become God)", also by Pathselector, which combines trance and
big beat elements. Sherburne said that it contains "carefully sculpted vocal synths" similar to the ones found in
Garden of Delete (2015) by
Oneohtrix Point Never. The last two tracks, "Key" and "Eon Break", are by Technic-Angel. The EDM-like track "Key" changes its
key halfway through, a common
pop music trope. The trance-like "Eon Break" ends the EP with "a break-neck, glittering, happy-hardcore tune", according to Bein, while Sherburne felt it "deals in
hardstyle cadences and machine-gun snares". == Promotion and release ==