Digital Resistance is the ninth studio album by American heavy metal band Slough Feg.
"[6] The album cover features a statue of Romulus and Remus, the mythological founders of Rome, suckling a she-wolf set against a dystopian background.
[7] Scalzi said that the cover is illustrative of the album's technophobic concerns with impact of digital technology upon society, which were informed by his experiences as a philosophy teacher.
[8] While the album's anti-technology orientation, according to Grayson Currin of Pitchfork, "seems almost painfully obvious for Slough Feg", he praised how Scalzi "spin[s] his rant toward a surprisingly broad" critique of "how electronics have turned well-meaning and intelligent people into facile consumers coldly following the orders of a screen".
[3] Grayson Currin of Pitchfork praised the album's songs for "overflow[ing] with two-guitar pirouettes and resplendent hooks, dynamic surges and appropriate aggression", in which Scalzi's maturity has become an asset that illuminates the album's theme: "Age is the real omnipresent apparition of Digital Resistance, the mechanism by which cell phones become a threat and sci-fi fantasies morph into Orwellian nightmares".