The similarities between Bad Cat’s light, compact, and versatile new Ocelot lunchbox head and its South American feline namesake make the amp’s moniker a truly apt one. A real ocelot is lean and agile, generally weighs around 20 pounds, and boasts incandescent eyes that glow when illuminated. It also packs a formidable bite quotient and can produce a loud, forceful roar or a softer, if no less menacing, close-range purr.With its 2xEL84 power stage, and 3x12AX7 preamp, the all-tube, 20-watt Bad Cat Ocelot is similarly taut, lean, and light. The aluminum chassis features a dazzling front panel with orange stripes that glow when the amp is on. And plugged into either an 8- or 16-ohm cabinet, the Ocelot displays a talent for roaring British lead and crunch tones, as well as mellow-to-menacing, but cleaner California-style sounds.It's also adaptable to almost every conceivable live, studio, and home environment, thanks to its internal speaker load, footswitchable 2-channel, dual-gain-mode versatility, the ability to shift from 20-watt to 1-watt operation with a single switch, and cabinet-simulated XLR and headphone outputs for recording and silent practice. Obviously, the Ocelot offers plentiful possibilities running straight into a speaker. But with software integration and editing capabilities via Two Notes software and their Torpedo DynIR multi-mic cabinet capture—which are deep and powerful tone-shaping tools on their own—the Ocelot shows just how wildly versatile a modern EL84 amp can be.Prowling the Jam JungleI performed a 10-song live Hendrix set with the Ocelot, and while it was far from dimed, the amp hit every corner of the venue. The front-panel EQ with bass, middle and treble is responsive and varied enough to match what your ear wants and needs in most musical situations. The mid control has an especially nice range and moves readily between smooth American tones and British bark. In fact, the only problem with the EQ is not the EQ itself, but the fact that the cool, but very bright orange light on the front grille can make front panel adjustments hard to see.Channel 1 is a clean machine. Add a dash of slapback delay in the Ocelot’s buffered effects loop, and rockabilly rave-ups and country double-stops on a Telecaster sound punchy and crisp. Choose the middle-bridge pickup combo on your Strat, hit a ninth chord or Curtis Mayfield-style third-based figures and you’ll conjure the spirits of Jimmy Nolen, Prince, Paul Jackson, Jr., and Nile Rodgers, all of which benefit from a whiff of very nice organic compression.Bump Channel 2 into “hi” mode and you’ll wonder how 20 watts produces lead tones that loud and dynamic. It’s simply wicked. Jazzbos and bluesmen will dig the Ocelot’s clean headroom, too. Neck and neck/middle position pickup configurations—along with a little guitar tone shaping—summon tones evocative of Otis Rush or Les Paul. Even surf and early garage enthusiasts can have a blast with Channel 1, which, via the included footswitch, can move between “lo” and “hi” gain mode—adding enough grit for Dave Davies, Link Wray, or Wayne Kramer speaker-tearing rages.The Hum of the ForestChannel 2, the higher-gain channel with dedicated gain control, is where many humbucker-oriented players will want to spend their time. And it’s here that the Ocelot pulls the Bad Cat formula into contemporary high-gain realms. Pickups as different as Gibson ’57 Classics, Seymour Duncan Hot Rails, and a brutal Duncan Nazgul set on a Schecter C-1 Standard are all capable of whiplash-inducing, djent-worthy wallop. Bump Channel 2 into “hi” mode and you’ll wonder how 20 watts produce lead tones that loud and dynamic. It’s simply wicked.Interestingly, while the Ocelot/single-coil pairings come across as full-throated and dynamic (very much like Eric Johnson’s most singing tones) it was less sweet with noiseless single-coils. This is a subjective observation, but it’s worth investigating if you plan on matching noiseless units with the Ocelot.Impulse ControlThe Ocelot is Bad Cat’s first leap into the world of cabinet emulation and impulse responses. But this direct recording functionality is no afterthought. Bad Cat made solid choices here with the internal load box by working with Two Notes Audio Engineering to help design their cabinet emulations, and by using the company’s Torpedo software for remote editing.In the interest of brevity, here’s what you absolutely need to know: Ocelot ships with six onboard cabinet emulations, selectable via a knob on the front panel. These are created with DynIR Virtual Cabinet Technology rather than as static impulse responses, and there are myriad options in the editing suite, including eight mic options for each cabinet, dual miking, variable mic axis, and up to 10,000 possible mic locations including front- and back-of-cabinet placings. All can be situated in a plethora of room and studio spaces. Ocelot can store up to 32 of these detailed DYNir Virtual Cabinets in internal memory. When connected to a computer (via the onboard USB-C port) you can use the cabinet manager in Torpedo to assign the IRs to Ocelot’s 6-way cab switch.The VerdictGiven Bad Cat’s pedigree, the Ocelot’s top-shelf voicing is no surprise. But paired with Torpedo, it offers a standout, standalone direct recording solution that’s competitive with most offerings in that ever-evolving space. And where some power-scaling amps can introduce irritating quirks, the Ocelot’s 2-channel design makes tone crafting across many gain and power levels easy. The Ocelot's $1,200 price is modest for an amp that magnifies the character of pickups this accurately and sounds this velvety right out of the box. Its versatility might just make that price an outright bargain.