I think that people don't get the parameters of weak filter modeling, aka, our friend who doesn't seem to understand what objective means. Not being modeled well is not a recipe for universally bad sounding patches. It means that some kinds of patches will sound much worse than on a better model and on some patches the differences will be less noticeable.wagtunes wrote: I have synths that, technically, I'm sure you would say are "inferior" synths that I enjoy using. Because for me, they sound "good enough". The older Arturia synths are a perfect example of that. I like the 2600. I know it's not an "accurate" emulation but I don't care. I can still use it to make music and I'm sure the layman out in the street listening on his iPhone wouldn't know the difference anyway.
But I do understand the desire and enjoyment of tech talk.
The 2600 is fun and, as I've commented before, I really like that it includes the sequencer model. However, when you rapidly modulate the filter and/or increase resonance, the weaknesses definitely make themselves known.
The 2600 is kind of the metric for Arturia's commitment to their old models for me. Had they upgraded all of the old models to more contemporary specs, I probably would have forked over the $199 for this release.
