Arturia V Collection 9 - Official Thread
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- KVRist
- 88 posts since 2 Dec, 2021
does the upgrade price per instrument changes? It's 50 coins which is already a quarter of the full price; hopefully this is not discountedghettosynth wrote: Fri May 27, 2022 10:31 pmIt usually does. I expect it to increase by $50 as the standard upgrade price for dis-loyal customers (those on older versions) has been $349.
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- KVRAF
- 16739 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
I'm not sure, I don't think so though. I've only ever upgraded one individual instrument and it was $29.grrrz wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 7:20 pmdoes the upgrade price per instrument changes? It's 50 coins which is already a quarter of the full price; hopefully this is not discountedghettosynth wrote: Fri May 27, 2022 10:31 pmIt usually does. I expect it to increase by $50 as the standard upgrade price for dis-loyal customers (those on older versions) has been $349.
- KVRAF
- 6299 posts since 12 Jan, 2018
During 50% off sales, the upgrade prices are slashed by half as well. So, what you see as $50/$30 right now will eventually be $25/$15 at some point, which is the perfect time IF you are only interested in one or two instruments. Otherwise, with Arturia it is usually best to get the V Collection (either new/second hand/upgrade/etc.), which you will eventually want anyway when the offers are tempting.ghettosynth wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 7:31 pmI'm not sure, I don't think so though. I've only ever upgraded one individual instrument and it was $29.grrrz wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 7:20 pmdoes the upgrade price per instrument changes? It's 50 coins which is already a quarter of the full price; hopefully this is not discountedghettosynth wrote: Fri May 27, 2022 10:31 pmIt usually does. I expect it to increase by $50 as the standard upgrade price for dis-loyal customers (those on older versions) has been $349.
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- KVRist
- 88 posts since 2 Dec, 2021
ok thanks good to know; so besides black friday are there other regular sales?LoveEnigma18 wrote: Tue May 31, 2022 5:00 amDuring 50% off sales, the upgrade prices are slashed by half as well. So, what you see as $50/$30 right now will eventually be $25/$15 at some point, which is the perfect time IF you are only interested in one or two instruments. Otherwise, with Arturia it is usually best to get the V Collection (either new/second hand/upgrade/etc.), which you will eventually want anyway when the offers are tempting.ghettosynth wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 7:31 pmI'm not sure, I don't think so though. I've only ever upgraded one individual instrument and it was $29.grrrz wrote: Mon May 30, 2022 7:20 pmdoes the upgrade price per instrument changes? It's 50 coins which is already a quarter of the full price; hopefully this is not discountedghettosynth wrote: Fri May 27, 2022 10:31 pmIt usually does. I expect it to increase by $50 as the standard upgrade price for dis-loyal customers (those on older versions) has been $349.![]()
- KVRAF
- 6299 posts since 12 Jan, 2018
Yes, Arturia does have sales every quarter (I mean not necessarily Q1, Q2, etc. type). However, there might not be a better deal on V Collection or newly released instruments again this year.
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- KVRAF
- 9879 posts since 15 Sep, 2005 from East Coast of the USA
I haven’t checked out the new additions yet, but I do really like the rebuilt CS-80 V4. 
- KVRAF
- 5622 posts since 23 Aug, 2014 from Boston/Cambridge
That, and both rebuilt Prophets.Examigan wrote: Wed Jun 01, 2022 4:03 pm I haven’t checked out the new additions yet, but I do really like the rebuilt CS-80 V4.![]()
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- KVRAF
- 9879 posts since 15 Sep, 2005 from East Coast of the USA
I have heard those two sound much better now. I am just taking any time I have to learn all about the CS-80 V, then I will definitely check out the Prophets. 
Last edited by Examigan on Thu Jun 02, 2022 10:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRer
- 10 posts since 20 Mar, 2022
Friends tell me. I think to buy while discount. Before that, I did not use plugins from Arturia. I have a keystep 37 and Augmented STRINGS (I don't remember how I got it, it seems even for free).
Therefore, the price of the collection will be 399.
Is it worth it? For electronics / experiments with industrial, maybe even with atmospheric black mixed with electronics? Maybe even for the classics with an admixture of electronics.. What do you think based on your experience?
Therefore, the price of the collection will be 399.
Is it worth it? For electronics / experiments with industrial, maybe even with atmospheric black mixed with electronics? Maybe even for the classics with an admixture of electronics.. What do you think based on your experience?
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- KVRist
- 199 posts since 14 Nov, 2020
Yes in my experience I would say so there is a lot of content too experiment with, almost too much. But to see if it fits your expectation you really should demo some of the synths before parting with that much cash. The demos dont expire and are really useful I would recommend trying at least the SQ80v, MS20V & the Buchla Easel V which are my personal favourites.YoGuRTeLLo wrote: Thu Jun 02, 2022 9:58 pm Friends tell me. I think to buy while discount. Before that, I did not use plugins from Arturia. I have a keystep 37 and Augmented STRINGS (I don't remember how I got it, it seems even for free).
Therefore, the price of the collection will be 399.
Is it worth it? For electronics / experiments with industrial, maybe even with atmospheric black mixed with electronics? Maybe even for the classics with an admixture of electronics.. What do you think based on your experience?
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- KVRer
- 10 posts since 20 Mar, 2022
Thank you very much for answer!Yes in my experience I would say so there is a lot of content too experiment with, almost too much. But to see if it fits your expectation you really should demo some of the synths before parting with that much cash. The demos dont expire and are really useful I would recommend trying at least the SQ80v, MS20V & the Buchla Easel V which are my personal favourites.
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- Banned
- 88 posts since 3 May, 2022
I don't know. I personally regret all the money I feel that I have wasted on the different V Collection editions over the years. I got sucked in because the V Collection instruments look like the original hardware instruments but up until very recently never actually sounded as good as the originals, IMO.YoGuRTeLLo wrote: Thu Jun 02, 2022 9:58 pm Friends tell me. I think to buy while discount. Before that, I did not use plugins from Arturia. I have a keystep 37 and Augmented STRINGS (I don't remember how I got it, it seems even for free).
Therefore, the price of the collection will be 399.
Is it worth it? For electronics / experiments with industrial, maybe even with atmospheric black mixed with electronics? Maybe even for the classics with an admixture of electronics.. What do you think based on your experience?
Regarding V Collection 9, I already own u-he's Repro and a hardware Sequential Pro One keyboard. So the updated Prophet 5 V doesn't really interest me. I'm also not super impressed by the new CS-80 V4. It certainly sounds good and reasonably realistic. But I think you could probably create pretty much the same patches that are included in the CS-80 V4 preset library using something like Diva (the way Swan Audio has created very realistic OB and Minimoog presets using just Diva). Of course, Diva hasn't specifically modeled the CS-80 oscillators and especially the CS-80 filters. But so many of the CS-80 V4 presets are just bread and butter analog synth sounds that any good analog modeled synth can recreate.
I know people will scoff (and mercilessly ridicule and mock me,) but I think you could use Steinberg's inexpensive $99 Retrologue 2 synth plugin to recreate almost all of the analog modeled synth presets included in the V Collection (and would use less CPU power doing so). Of course, there are still a lot of cool digital/hybrid instruments in the V Collection like the SQ-80 V, Prophet VS V, DX-7 V, CZ-V and of course the Synclavier V, Fairlight V, and Emulator V. If those really interest you, then the V Collection might be worth it.
I personally would put the $399 toward Spectrasonics' Omnisphere if you don't already own it. It's a totally different animal but sounds fantastic, includes over 10,000 amazing presets, has a wide assortment of characterful built in FX that are relatively light on the CPU, an encyclopedic collection of multisampled waveforms from all the classic hardware synths along with a comprehensive set of DSP oscillators and wavetables, a super flexible modulation matrix for each of the 4 layers in a patch, multistage envelopes and loads of LFOs if you need them, a HUGE assortment of great sounding filters, an awesome arpeggiator, one of the best patch browsers of any instrument, and is dead simple to use. Why not learn one instrument like Omnisphere really well rather than 30+ in the V Collection all with their own idiosyncratic interfaces (that are usually, but not always, based on the original hardware instruments and thus often don't make a lot of sense presented the same way in software)?
Anyway, sorry for the novella. I hope this helps.
- KVRian
- 948 posts since 25 Sep, 2014
Because it's funOllieBoi wrote: Fri Jun 03, 2022 4:19 am Why not learn one instrument like Omnisphere really well rather than 30+ in the V Collection all with their own idiosyncratic interfaces (that are usually, but not always, based on the original hardware instruments and thus often don't make a lot of sense presented the same way in software)?
