Wavetable synths use quite some CPU power, so I guess I can forget about that. But Codex would certainly be the most appealing one to me, also has a nice user interface and is not as bloated as other such synths.EnGee wrote:I think I didn't try with Massive enough (it was the last one in hurry). It can sound wonderful really, so blame it on me!
I haven't delved deeply into Codex yet, but yes it has unison and it surprised me how good it can sound. I'm not sure about Elements. I almost bought it but as you see I have many synths and I'm already confused about them. Anyway, Codex is a great synth. I love it. As you said, it can sound very 80's (high quality 80's!). It also can do weird wavetables sounds and you can modulate moving between the tables if one table is not enough!
Thor is in ReasonGreat synth really, it has many kinds of ocsillators (Wavetable, Analog, Multi, Phase Modulation, FM pair and Noise). It has several great filters as well. Thor IMO from the best designed synths ever. Reason worth it alone just with Thor
Of course, my favourite 'Jupiter' synth! Retrologue I love it.
I tried little bit with Sunrizer, but I couldn't come with something the same league with the others. I was surprised as I thought it can do it easily. Anyway, Sunrizer is good for the bright super saw as a lead, but Sylenth is more interesting of course.
With the supersaw sound, it is not only the sound as such, but how it is used/played. If I remember correctly (I hate Trance and EDM in general, so my memories in that respect are very limited
I am still/again impressed by Sylenth, that old synth can produce so many different sounds one might not expect from those more basic waveforms etc. it has. And all that while using little CPU and being rock-solid
