Armageddon Holocaust

[2][3] Into Total Destruction was also re-released, as it was THT Production's highest selling album, according to Arwadi, who was a member of the record label's staff.

[5] In 2005, all the band members left the group, but Armageddon Holocaust continued as a legal entity with an active record deal.

[7][8] Doctor D and Dark Thriller have stated that Armageddon Holocaust was originally formed as a conceptual project to capture their emotions about the future destruction of Earth and its "false inhabitants" as described in the Book of Revelation.

"[2] The band was charged by Art for the Ears with having very harsh and violent lyrics, to which Doctor Dark responded: "I have a very strong feeling that we are at the end of time.

– Doctor Dark, Art for the Ears interview[8]The second album continued in this vein, with Jeff Arwadi saying that the lyrics in Radioactive Zone 245 "are mostly about the destruction of Earth, both in smaller or larger scales; the process that mankind has made throughout history, and in the future we ourselves who will reap all that we sow.

[2] Its first release, Into Total Destruction, was described as being extreme black metal similar to Horde or early Kekal, and received mixed reviews from critics.

[9] The poor and inconsistent production was one of the main reasons for the album's re-release, which was digitally re-mastered in 24-bit format.

[2][10] Jeff commented on this when talking with HM Magazine, stating "I think this album needed to be re-mastered, because we recorded it under a very poor condition.

"[3] When asked about their musical influences, Doctor Dark has cited Celtic Frost, Hellhammer, Bathory, Discharge, Venom, Kreator, Destruction, Sodom, Unseen Terror, Motörhead, Exodus, Darkthrone, Burzum, and Bulldozer.