When Serum came out in 2014, eight years ago, it surpassed Massive which had been THE software synthesizer of all of Dubstep and many other EDM subgenres. It did everything better than Massive did: better sounding Wavetables, more Wavtetable editing possibilities, more modulation possibilities, and a much more visual workflow that was unheard of at the time.dmbaer wrote: Tue Nov 08, 2022 8:13 pm Back to Serum being a so-called game changer. Although I have way more virtual synths than I could ever need (most, but not all, of the mainstream ones), I don't have Serum and know very little about it. So (and this is a genuine question, not snark) what, if anything, does Serum bring to the table that other synths do not?
Besides its GUI and its features, Duda's update policy has been exemplary. The last update of Serum is a couple of days old. There are not that many software instruments of this age still maintained with new features and bug fixes. And yes, besides Omnisphere, no other software synthesizer comes close in terms of third-party sounds.
To get back to your question, what Serum offers, and what others don`t: the wavetable editor still offers options that even Vital does not. Also, Serum offers close to 90 different filter types, from what I counted that's more than Omnisphere and Pigments combined.
You can "hybridize" a preset, and mash it up with a selection of other presets. While some of these features might be in other VTSi of today, none have combined them as elegantally.

