No, it hasn't. The key features I mentioned in the original post is missing in those. Believe me, iv'e tried them all. FL Studio may look similar but is quite different to work with.exmatproton wrote:Well, with all due respect, it has been bettered for sure. By FL Studio to name 1.pepelogu wrote:Hehe... no, that was not ment as an ad.It's my sincere opinion.
I just find it mind boggling that this ancient piece of software to this day hasn't been bettered. I was one of probably 15 people who actually bought it back in the day.
Geist2 is above it, quite an amount of Reaktor devices as well...
How come the 15 year old Ruction is still the best Drum-machine?
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 484 posts since 5 Jan, 2004 from In the now
"If less is more, just think of how much more, more will be".
- KVRAF
- 3385 posts since 25 Apr, 2011
lolpepelogu wrote:No, it hasn't. The key features I mentioned in the original post is missing in those. Believe me, iv'e tried them all. FL Studio may look similar but is quite different to work with.exmatproton wrote:Well, with all due respect, it has been bettered for sure. By FL Studio to name 1.pepelogu wrote:Hehe... no, that was not ment as an ad.It's my sincere opinion.
I just find it mind boggling that this ancient piece of software to this day hasn't been bettered. I was one of probably 15 people who actually bought it back in the day.
Geist2 is above it, quite an amount of Reaktor devices as well...
And vice versa. It just depends on what you want it to do. 'Bettered' in that sense is really subjective. FL Studio, Geist2 and many Reaktor modules blow this thing to pieces. If you want to "hold on" to this, please do and enjoy. But really, if i start to write down all the so called key-features of aformentioned vst's, you'll see that Ruction is indeed really old and lack loads of functionallity compared to my examples.
Which isn't a bad thing, but it is a fact
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 484 posts since 5 Jan, 2004 from In the now
Well, i disagree. Have you used Ruction extensively?exmatproton wrote:lolpepelogu wrote:No, it hasn't. The key features I mentioned in the original post is missing in those. Believe me, iv'e tried them all. FL Studio may look similar but is quite different to work with.exmatproton wrote:Well, with all due respect, it has been bettered for sure. By FL Studio to name 1.pepelogu wrote:Hehe... no, that was not ment as an ad.It's my sincere opinion.
I just find it mind boggling that this ancient piece of software to this day hasn't been bettered. I was one of probably 15 people who actually bought it back in the day.
Geist2 is above it, quite an amount of Reaktor devices as well...![]()
And vice versa. It just depends on what you want it to do. 'Bettered' in that sense is really subjective. FL Studio, Geist2 and many Reaktor modules blow this thing to pieces. If you want to "hold on" to this, please do and enjoy. But really, if i start to write down all the so called key-features of aformentioned vst's, you'll see that Ruction is indeed really old and lack loads of functionallity compared to my examples.
Which isn't a bad thing, but it is a fact
"If less is more, just think of how much more, more will be".
- KVRAF
- 22873 posts since 8 Oct, 2014
And let the specs war begin.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 484 posts since 5 Jan, 2004 from In the now
Yeah, a spec war Ruction would obviously loose. 
But for ease of use, funfactor, inspiring etc. Ruction is unmatched.
I'm not here to defend or promote Ruction, i'm here in hope of finding a replacement since it is only 32bit and a bit buggy. As i've said I don't care for Geist2 or FL Studio (don't like a daw within a daw). Anything else out there?
What Reaktor-ensembles are similar?
But for ease of use, funfactor, inspiring etc. Ruction is unmatched.
I'm not here to defend or promote Ruction, i'm here in hope of finding a replacement since it is only 32bit and a bit buggy. As i've said I don't care for Geist2 or FL Studio (don't like a daw within a daw). Anything else out there?
What Reaktor-ensembles are similar?
"If less is more, just think of how much more, more will be".
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- KVRian
- 832 posts since 1 Sep, 2007
I guess it would be worth checking out Xfer Nerve...pepelogu wrote:...i'm here in hope of finding a replacement since it is only 32bit and a bit buggy. As i've said I don't care for Geist2 or FL Studio (don't like a daw within a daw). Anything else out there?
...
https://www.xferrecords.com/products/nerve
Can't really say if ALL the functions you listed is available in Nerve cause I have yet to mastered it fully, but if you haven't tried it yet I recommend you to do so...
- KVRAF
- 3385 posts since 25 Apr, 2011
Disagree with facts? Lol...pepelogu wrote:Well, i disagree. Have you used Ruction extensively?exmatproton wrote:lolpepelogu wrote:No, it hasn't. The key features I mentioned in the original post is missing in those. Believe me, iv'e tried them all. FL Studio may look similar but is quite different to work with.exmatproton wrote:Well, with all due respect, it has been bettered for sure. By FL Studio to name 1.pepelogu wrote:Hehe... no, that was not ment as an ad.It's my sincere opinion.
I just find it mind boggling that this ancient piece of software to this day hasn't been bettered. I was one of probably 15 people who actually bought it back in the day.
Geist2 is above it, quite an amount of Reaktor devices as well...![]()
And vice versa. It just depends on what you want it to do. 'Bettered' in that sense is really subjective. FL Studio, Geist2 and many Reaktor modules blow this thing to pieces. If you want to "hold on" to this, please do and enjoy. But really, if i start to write down all the so called key-features of aformentioned vst's, you'll see that Ruction is indeed really old and lack loads of functionallity compared to my examples.
Which isn't a bad thing, but it is a fact
Again, if you think and feel Ruction tops all current sequencers, then, be my guest. Keep on using it. Enjoy it. Whatever fits you. But you are really merely stating opinions as they are facts, which is faulty.
Ruction is a good, simple and fun seq. I've used it years ago, before i went completely fl studio (which, imho, is Ruction and many other sequencers, on steroids)
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Found it in a minutewagtunes wrote:Yeah, except there's no links to it anywhere in the post or in his signature and can you even still buy this thing?
http://www.d-dev.com/
The domain last update date was 23-aug-2016, so the dev still care to pay for the upkeep
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- KVRian
- 523 posts since 19 Jun, 2016
the best drum machine out there is...... Omnisphere!
there! now i've really fuolczkioued things up

there! now i've really fuolczkioued things up
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 484 posts since 5 Jan, 2004 from In the now
Wow, a response that is actually helpful. Thanks, Nerve looks cool.Kr3eM wrote:I guess it would be worth checking out Xfer Nerve...pepelogu wrote:...i'm here in hope of finding a replacement since it is only 32bit and a bit buggy. As i've said I don't care for Geist2 or FL Studio (don't like a daw within a daw). Anything else out there?
...
https://www.xferrecords.com/products/nerve
Can't really say if ALL the functions you listed is available in Nerve cause I have yet to mastered it fully, but if you haven't tried it yet I recommend you to do so...
"If less is more, just think of how much more, more will be".
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- KVRian
- 1478 posts since 2 Mar, 2005
I agree with you. Easier drum programs to use such as this one are so rare and I'm not sure why. I mean you have all of these drum samplers/machines that can do pretty much anything, but they miss the one mark.... simplicity.
If anyone has ever used an old school drum machine like a Boss Dr660 or and Alesis SR16 know what I mean. Program your beats, pick a sound, minor adjustments, switch between patterns, it syncs, that's it. It doesn't take up your whole screen with endless options. There are a few things that are close (Poise comes to mind if it had a sequencer, DK+ if it was developed just a little more) but everything is just all so counterproductive. There should be a balance of "ease of use" and "depth of features". And I'm not talking about a whole DAW. Just something simple that loads fast & doesn't cost $300. Please enlighten me if I am missing a product.
If anyone has ever used an old school drum machine like a Boss Dr660 or and Alesis SR16 know what I mean. Program your beats, pick a sound, minor adjustments, switch between patterns, it syncs, that's it. It doesn't take up your whole screen with endless options. There are a few things that are close (Poise comes to mind if it had a sequencer, DK+ if it was developed just a little more) but everything is just all so counterproductive. There should be a balance of "ease of use" and "depth of features". And I'm not talking about a whole DAW. Just something simple that loads fast & doesn't cost $300. Please enlighten me if I am missing a product.
I read more than post = I listen more than I talk
- KVRAF
- 8099 posts since 13 Jan, 2003 from Darkest Kent, UK
I used to like the surface simplicity of Guru. Obviously a helluva lot more versatile than Ruction but you could easily ignore most of it's functionality and just use it in a similar way.
Something got lost with Geist I think...
Something got lost with Geist I think...
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- KVRAF
- 9843 posts since 15 Sep, 2005 from East Coast of the USA
I have been on KVR over 10 years and have never heard of this one, but you're saying it's the "best"? Seems like I would have heard more about it over the years if it was that good.
- KVRAF
- 9091 posts since 28 May, 2005 from Netherneverlands
Never heard about that one. Looks nice! Especially the midi drag/drop feature, which imho every (drum)midisequencer should have these days, but most of them still don't.GaryG wrote:Stepchild step sequencer (2003ish?)
Eager to check it out.. but.. Stepchild link on kvr product page goes 404
No band limits, aliasing is the noise of freedom!
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- KVRian
- 928 posts since 3 Sep, 2011
Wave alchemy revolution looks pretty straightforward.
