The VRM is a variation of the VVR, which I think was popularized by Dana and Ritchie Hall over on 18watt.com. Hall Amplification used to sell the little VVR boards for about $30, and I still have a few in the parts drawer.
Basically what this does is takes your B+ (rectified high voltage) to a circuit that essentially "dumps" some of the voltage through a mosfet to the chassis or other heat sink. I have no idea how a mosfet works, but it is my understanding this extra voltage is released as heat through the chassis.
This "scales" the voltage of the entire amp down but basically keeping all the "proportions" the same. VVR preserves to tone fairly well until (in my opinion) you get into lower settings.
One of the options with Hall's VVR instructions was to scale only the power amp, keeping the pre-amp "stock". While I never implemented this in any of my builds, it is thought to preserve the tone of the amp a lot better especially at lower settings.
geometry dash bloodbathThe VVR (and VRM) are for cathode-biased amps. Hall did sell a board for fixed bias but I've never seen/used it.
This is a pretty good option when scaling up a power amplifier, keeping the preamp "stock" intact. But the way to do it is quite complicated.