Oh for cry'n out loud.Sendy wrote:I know it's their code and they have every right to discontinue and vaporize, blah blah blah, but as a compulsive softsynth hoarder I deeply resent their choice to shelf this synthNumanoid wrote:Man I love Japan, Richard Barbieri et al. Thanks for sharingHemmick Reef wrote:used Native Instruments Pro53![]()
But the thing is here that nobody can buy Pro53 anymore, it is discontinued by NI. So from a commerical point of view, there will be no sale anyhow
It's like, oh, you want this, eh? You like that? WELL YOU CAN'T HAVE IT! KEEP YOUR MONEY! There goes my fun little game of collecting every synth ever madeWELL THAT THING WAS USED FOR THE SYNC SWEEP SOUNDS IN PORTAL 2! IT HAS HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL VALUE! LET ME HAVE IT YOU PERVERTS!
So... yeah, it sounds similar in the same way that a Chrysler 300 looks similar to a Bently, but it's quite different to anyone actually paying attention. Can good music be made with it? Sure, no question, but if we're speaking about pure quality and closeness of emulation, I think even Native Instruments would agree that it was a fail judging by their actions.
That said, why doesn't Native Instruments step up and bring something good to the vintage emulation table? It's the one hole in their offerings... and no I don't count Reaktor instruments. I'm sure that Moog emulation they released recently is fine but wouldn't hold up next to Diva in devine mode.

