If it was an Omni add for $199, sure. But at $400? Forget it. I don't need a bunch of pianos that badly.ghettosynth wrote:Because it's a part of their business model to bundle enough stuff together to create enough value to keep the profit up relative to the number of transactions. They also want to differentiate themselves in a way that can't be easily knocked off. Companies like Uhe, that actually are technically innovative, can eat Spectra's lunch in technical terms, but, don't necessarily have the resources to gather and restore all of these old vintage instruments. If you released them one at a time the game becomes a little different. There will undoubtedly be favorites and, consequently, less than favorites in that collection, so the competition could just focus on duplicating the winners and compete on price.Frantz wrote:Banana guy thinks it sounds good:
I don't understand why they didn't release one piano and one rhodes first and the rest as a series of expansion packs. Why wait 10 years to do a big bang release?
This is right up their alley and actually is a great representation of their skills. I find it hilarious that Omni users are so disappointed.
So what is the competition for this? I don't find the Arturia Rhodes to be that great, I do like the Wurli well enough, but it doesn't sound as good to me as this offering.
And that's the problem for us Omni owners. You essentially turn a $500 synth into almost a $1,000 synth just by adding some keys?
Really.
I mean think about it. Omni is only $100 more than this thing and it covers everything BUT.
It's the pricing model that turns me off more than anything else.

