Promotion for Forever began with the release of a music video directed by Max Moore for the title and opening track, "Forever", in October 2016.[1] Presented entirely in black, white and red like the album's cover art, the video for "Forever" rapidly cuts between scenes of Code Orange performing and other violent or abstract imagery, often with shaky camera footage. Of the video, Jami Morgan said, "I think the visuals match what we're about. It's definitely brutal and it's dark, but I think we have our own specific brand of it that includes a lot of dynamics of dark and a lot of shades of that."[2] In December 2016, Code Orange released a digitally created "visualizer" for the track "Kill the Creator".[3] Created by Brandon Allen Bolmer, the video shows a naked man in a chamber being tortured by a "hellish force that he created from all the wrong he has done".[3] In the weeks leading up to the album's official release date, Code Orange also released online streams of the tracks "Bleeding in the Blur"[4][5] and "Ugly" in January 2017.[6]
Touring in support of Forever began with a January–February 2017 US tour with Youth Code, Gatecreeper, Nicole Dollanganger, Lifeless and Disgrace.[4][5][7] The tour was noted for its wide variety of music genres among the bands on the bill. On the subject of the variety of bands, Morgan said, "I don't think it's something people are going to get to see every day. It's gonna be a very jarring experience. And our set's going to be a jarring experience. And the whole show is going to be a jarring experience, so that's what we're all about."[2] The guitarist Eric Balderose collaborated with Drumcorps to create a mixtape under the name Shade, titled It's Almost Forever, that was played between sets and exclusively sold on cassette on the tour.[4] A music video for the track "The Mud", directed by Balderose and Dmitry Zakharov, was premiered on Adult Swim's Toonami block on September 30, 2017.[8]
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 87, which indicates "universal acclaim", based on six reviews.[20]
The A.V. Club critic J.J. Anselmi wrote, "Despite its ridiculous lyrical moments, Forever advances the trend of mashing together disparate styles in metal and hardcore."[15] Branan Ranjanathan of Exclaim! thought that "Code Orange have put together a record that few others in the genre would have the nerve to attempt making, and have found a number of ways to stay engaging across the set without losing any of their previous weight or momentum."[17] Metal Injection's Michael Pementel noted the "great use of structure, heaviness, surprises, and pure energy from beginning to end in this album".[22] According to Conor Scharr of Gigsoup, "[Code Orange]have uprooted themselves from genre tropes to build something entirely original."[21]
Stephen Hill of Metal Hammer wrote that "this is resolutely hardcore punk, while remaining completely unique" and called it "a stone cold modern classic".[10] Michael Pementel of Metal Injection stated, "It is not just simply that this is great heavy music, but effective heavy music."[22]MetalSucks noted that "[the album's] playbook aligns with the band’s last album...[and]] also [has] a dream-like quality about it, a nightmarish hardcore fever."[23]
Nicholas Senior of New Noise Magazine called the album "raw, angry, and unfiltered".[19]Pitchfork critic Zoe Camp wrote that the band "offers up compelling, caustic, and occasionally even catchy evidence that they have earned their alpha-dog scene posturing".[18] Jon of Punknews.org wrote that with this album, "Code Orange's returning reign of hardcore and sludge has finally been unveiled. On their new album, Forever Code Orange takes their themes one step further while keeping the music just as brutal as before."[11]
^Epstein, Dan; Bennett, J; Pessaro, Fred; Camp, Zoe; Geist, Brandon (December 5, 2017). "20 Best Albums of 2017". Revolverdate=December 5, 2017. Retrieved August 11, 2022.
^Weingarten, Christopher R.; Shteamer, Hank; Bienstock, Richard; Grow, Kory; Epstein, Dan (December 6, 2017). "20 Best Metal Albums of 2017". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 11, 2022.