Hi,Sendy wrote:That would be my guess, though there are somethings Nuklear can't do that RB can and vice versa. For example, Nuklear lets you microsequence the pulse train by turning off certain pulses, which creates suboctaves and stuff. RB doesn't have this, but it does have lots more waveform options, loadable impulses, etc. RB can do resynthesis and mangle music/drum loops as well, so it seems more interesting to me.Numanoid wrote:So is it sort of related to Hamburg Audio's Nuklear which is based on advanced granular pulse train synthesisSendy wrote:This seems like a cross between granular synthesis and pulsar/pulse train synthesis. I'm liking that the "pitch noise modulation" and low cut filters from Saurus have carried over. Those two features go a LONG way.![]()
Also, this is pure assumption based on the GUI and blurb (which I take with a massive dose of salt and a few chuckles here and there... you gotta love t2's marketing division). I suspect Rayblaster will offer a lot more value for money when compared to Nuklear, which I felt was a tad overpriced.
I have done Beta testing and factory sounds for both Nuklear and Rayblaster and don't think they are very much similar. I agree that with the Resynthesis feature there could be some comparable results but the Impulse modelling synthesis is not comparable to the Pulsar Train Synthesis IMO. Anyway both are great synths in their own respect.
I have already told lot about what is possible with Rayblaster during the last pages but i think it's better to wait until it's allowed to post audio demos (which will take some time...) before i tell more.
Ingo






