![]() ![]() If you're someone who doesn't know what you want, likes to have 1000's of presets for inspiration, and also would benefit from everything being in one nice plugin with more customization than say, *UVI packs, than try this out for sure. So to sum it up, I'd say for anyone that is a synth nerd or proficient with designing their own sounds- go with VSTi's for each sound you're looking for. On the flip side, you can find pretty much anything you're looking for synth wise in 1 plugin, rather than having to go through dozens of other VSTi plugins. Unless you want to take the time to go through all the oscillator samples you can't really "dial in" a sound from scratch, so you have to find a preset close to what you want and then dial it in from there. If you do like to use presets as inspiration or a starting point, than Syntronik might be great. I might use some presets to get closer to what I'm looking for, but 1000's of presets is not for me, it only slows me down. I don't use a lot of presets, I design most of my sounds. The trouble is, that's my workflow and you might be different. As someone who owns a lot of vintage synths, as well as just about every replica synth plugin (Arturia, TAL, Cherry Audio, Softube, GForce, Roland Cloud, Korg, etc.) after playing with Syntronik for about a day, I realized, it doesn't fit my workflow and I could replicate almost all of the presets within a few minutes in a plugin, so for me it doesn't make much sense.
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