Yinx is a producer and DJ associated with the contemporary breakbeat and bass continuum, with a profile tied to Granada and the Andalusian club circuit. In Optimal Breaks’ orbit, the name appears through recent chart activity and releases that place him within the current breaks ecosystem rather than among unrelated namesakes.
The existing profile already located him in the present-day scene through Optimal Breaks’ weekly chart "40 Breaks Vitales", and that remains the clearest frame for understanding his role: a current artist working in breakbeat-led electronic club music, with tracks circulating through specialist labels and DJ networks.
Web context around the project identifies Yinx as a breakbeat and UK garage DJ/producer from Granada. That combination fits a strand of southern Spanish club culture where breakbeat has long coexisted with bass music, garage swing, tougher electro-influenced rhythms and sound-design-focused production.
Beatport metadata links the artist name Yinx to Cristian Sedano Martin, describing a background of more than a decade in production and an emphasis on sound design. Even without overstating milestones, that points to a producer shaped not only by DJ functionality but also by studio craft, arrangement detail and texture.
His chart presence in the 2025-2026 "40 Breaks Vitales" snapshot is tied to three labels that help define his current positioning: iBreaks, Raveart Records and Br8kn Records. Those imprints place him in a recognisable international breaks network spanning club-ready rollers, bass pressure and modernised breakbeat forms.
The tracks documented in that chart context are "Endless Void" on iBreaks, "Acid show" on Raveart Records and "Break Me" on Br8kn Records. Taken together, those titles suggest a catalogue aimed at the dancefloor while leaving room for darker atmospheres, acidic touches and a contemporary bass-weighted finish.
"Endless Void" is especially useful as a marker because iBreaks has long functioned as a reference point for modern breakbeat. Appearing in that label environment places Yinx within a conversation that connects newer producers to an established transnational breaks audience.
"Acid show" points toward another side of the project: a taste for sharper synth language and rave-derived energy rather than a purely functional breaks template. That detail matters because it suggests a producer working across adjacent vocabularies inside the broader breakbeat field.
"Break Me", credited through Br8kn Records, reinforces the image of Yinx as an artist active in the current release economy of specialist breaks labels. Rather than belonging to a single narrow formula, his profile reads as part of a flexible bass-music approach where breakbeat remains the central grammar.
The Granada connection is also significant. Andalusia has sustained one of Europe’s most distinctive breakbeat cultures, with local scenes, promoters and DJs helping keep the style active across generations. In that context, Yinx belongs to a newer wave of artists extending the region’s relationship with breaks into present-day digital platforms and label circuits.
His mention as both DJ and producer matters to the way the project is understood. The music sits naturally in club use, but the available context also points to a producer attentive to construction, sound design and crossover potential between breakbeat, bass and UK garage-informed movement.
At this stage, Yinx is best understood as part of the contemporary infrastructure of breaks: an Andalusian artist with releases on active scene labels, a foothold in specialist charts and a sound aligned with modern breakbeat’s dialogue with bass-heavy club music. That makes him a relevant name in the current map of Spanish and international breaks culture.