After more than ten years into their career, Of Mice & Men sound sharper, more confident, and more creatively in charge when they arrive with Another Miracle.
The record, which was entirely self-produced, seems to be the best representation of the band in 2025—heavy, melodic, atmospheric, and unafraid to venture into uncharted emotional territory.
It’s an album built equally for longtime fans and listeners who’ve grown up alongside metalcore’s evolution into something more expansive.
It’s evident right away that “Another Miracle” is driven more by emotion than by physical prowess. The band alternates between the kind of crushing riffs and dual-vocal interplay that have traditionally characterised their sound and shimmering textures, slow-burn buildup, and epic layering.

The band’s revitalised confidence is most evident in the mid-album standout “Flowers.” It starts out with a calm, subdued mood before building into a massive, intensely emotional crescendo that seems perfect for a festival audience.
If there’s any critique to be made, it’s that “Another Miracle” doesn’t often stray far from the sonic palette the band have built over the past few years. While the consistency is impressive, some listeners may find themselves wishing for a left-field moment or dramatic stylistic diversion.
But this restraint also feels purposeful: Of Mice & Men aren’t reinventing themselves here — they’re refining themselves.

Ultimately, this is an album that relies on balance: it’s atmospheric enough to seem new within the larger metalcore scene, melodic enough to stick in your brain, and hard enough to satisfy fans who seek pit-starting enthusiasm.
Another Miracle aims to resonate rather than shock, and it is successful in doing so.
A self-assured, engrossing, and deeply moving chapter for Of Mice & Men. One of their best late-career statements, it was a refinement rather than an innovation.







