
ShipRocked pulled out of the Port of Miami on Sunday, January 25th, for a unforgettable start to the music festival at sea celebrating its Sweet 16 birthday. However, ShipRocked 2026 felt different from the moment the Carnival Horizon left the Port of Miami. Bigger ship, deeper lineup, heavier moments. This year’s edition wasn’t just a party at sea; it was a living, breathing ecosystem of metal, community, and collective release.
Day 1: Avatar Leads the Sailaway With Rum Punches
Sunday’s departure set the tone immediately. Survivors and first-time newbs alike explored the sprawling Carnival Horizon, recalibrating their ShipRocked instincts for a new floating city. The festival officially ignited with Mount Olympus, where Zeus Skully and Cookie welcomed ShipRockers like mythological cruise directors presiding over the loudest family reunion imaginable.
Avatar handled sail-away duties with theatrical flair, emerging in robes and drinking rum punches like ritual offerings. Their set leaned into both spectacle and substance, debuting the new track “Don’t Go Into the Forest” alongside fan favorites like “Let It Burn.” The ocean backdrop only amplified the band’s controlled menace.
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As night fell, Starset transformed the deck into a cinematic arena, their synth-heavy anthems soaring into the open air. Tracks like “MANIFEST” and “Monster” landed hard, while an encore of “Toksik” confirmed the band’s growing dominance in hybrid rock spaces. A special nod belonged to their keyboardist, who killed it at the back of the stage.
Inside the Liquid Lounge, Sleep Theory’s set quickly became one of the weekend’s first “you had to be there” moments. The room hit capacity early, forcing some fans to wait for the monster deck set later in the week as the band tore through “Fallout,” “Parasite,” and “Just a Mistake,” cementing their breakout status.
Wage War closed the deck with authority, ripping through “Low,” “Gravity,” and “The River,” before closing the night with “Manic.”
Day 2: At Sea, At Full Volume
Monday leaned into ShipRocked’s most unique strength: access. Midday meet-and-greets with KITTIE, Motionless in White, Sleep Theory, and The Stowaways blurred the line between artist and audience, a recurring theme throughout the week.
House of Protection delivered one of the most jaw-dropping sets of the cruise. Former Fever 333 members Stephen Harrison and Aric Improta turned the deck stage into a vertical playground, climbing scaffolding mid-set and performing above the crowd as if daring gravity to intervene. It was one of the most unforgettable moments of the cruise.
AWOLNATION proved to be one of ShipRocked’s biggest curveballs — and greatest victories. Skeptics were quickly converted as Aaron Bruno led a euphoric, ocean-born singalong of “SAIL,” earning calls for a permanent spot on future lineups.
The loyalty party brought intimacy, with acoustic performances from The Funeral Portrait and Sleep Theory. From Ashes to New followed later on the theater stage with one of the cruise’s most emotionally raw moments, as front man Matt Brandyberry opened up about surviving suicidal ideation, crediting fans with saving his life before launching into a massive singalong of “Hate Me Too.”
Knocked Loose shattered ShipRocked history by inspiring the first-ever crowd surfing on the deck stage. Their brutally heavy set — anchored by “Blinding Faith,” “Don’t Reach for Me,” and “Mistakes Like Fracture” — was met with reverence. Vocalist Bryan Garris thanked the crowd, noting the band’s drummer had been trying to get on the boat for a decade. The wait was worth it.
Day 3: Half Moon Cay & Controlled Mayhem
Half Moon Cay returned as a familiar refuge, even under chilly skies. Shepherds Reign dominated the beach stage, performing a Samoan-language version of Motörhead’s “Iron Fist” as a circle pit erupted — in the water. Sound issues early on were quickly corrected, and the band led a thunderous Māori rugby chant of “Rock Hard, Vacation Harder.”
Suicidal Tendencies handled sail-away duties with punk ferocity, introducing new drummer Xavier Ware and reminding everyone why they remain essential for everyone who loves punk rock.
The Funeral Portrait delivered theatrical precision in the theater, while KITTIE took over the deck sounding sharper and heavier than ever, tearing through “Charlotte,” “I’ve Failed You,” and “Brackish.”
Wage War’s evening set featured a surprise appearance from Eric Vanlerberghe of I Prevail on “Nails,” before Motionless in White headlined the night. Celebrating 20 years as a band and debuting their new song “Afraid of the Dark,” the set blended legacy and evolution. “Thoughts & Prayers” hit with brutal force, while “Eternally Yours” closed the night in collective catharsis.