Creating a basic bread and butter synth is pushing the boundaries? With all due respect to you and your work, I think you and I have separate definitions for the word boundaries.Angus_FX wrote:Oh, Strobe 2 pushes boundaries all right. Perhaps not the same ones as Spire, Serum or Zebra, but nevertheless it does.
The aim was to create the synth equivalent of a well-balanced guitar, a nice chef's knife or a good camera. It's not about the number of features, but how they work together.
I am not to sure what you mean, you're just stating something I already said. But I will rephrase it so even you an understand. Just because you put a lot of work into something does not mean the final product will be the same value to you as it will be to consumers. You must look at the product by itself and try to make an unbiased estimation as to what the average person would be willing to buy it for. Now I have, as many others, stated that the asking price and the upgrade price is too steep! That tells me that it has been priced too high for what is in essence a basic bread and butter synth, that alone cost more than Sylenth1, arguably the most-basic synth. To me, it feels like a money-grab. But hey, it's their synth and they can sell it for whatever they want (I hate repeating myself as I already said this, people just don't read I suppose...)whyterabbyt wrote:and neither does price.Pyrotek45 wrote:You have to realize, effort does not equal value

