It's probably easy to get going if you have a digital piano with built in sound. It's not easy to set up if you want to use a midi keyboard. It didn't even have a built in sound engine last I tried and getting some sort of VST instrument going with low latency was fiddly. I had to install midi loopback extension in Windows and run Cubase in the background.monomaker wrote: ↑Thu Jun 20, 2019 11:14 amDon't agree on any of these points, you can get up and running in under a minute and it takes MIDI files, so the potential song library is vast. Don't understand what aspect seems amateurish to you, I've only tried it very briefly but it seemed the complete opposite of what you're describing.PeterP_swe wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2019 8:39 am Synthesia is a bit too amateurish, fiddly to set up and doesn't have the song library necessary.
And with the song library I meant that there is no clear progression path if you want to learn, where it picks some easy song and build up from there. Each song doesn't have multiple difficulty levels built in. It's not a smooth experience like in Rocksmith or Rockband.
It also doesn't come with a bunch of well known songs. You have to buy them separately and they're not cheap.