It's not an excuse, it's actually the reality. And it's not closed off to external inputs, you can use whatever noise samples you want. I know that's not what you mean but still, that's the reality. It probably could import wavetables given the fact it can use imported samples but the fact it can't suggests the metadata issue is actually the real reason NI didn't allow it.enCiphered wrote: Wed Jun 11, 2025 10:59 pm Massive X is marketed as a flagship wavetable synth, yet it’s closed off to external content. That fundamentally contradicts the modular and exploratory spirit of wavetable synthesis. Every serious wavetable synth today, even free ones offer WT import. So Teksonik is absolutely right here.
Yes, you get 170+ tables with shaping modifiers, but they're finite. Creative workflows are stifled when you can’t experiment with your own audio sources. The metadata excuse is weak. NI could still allow user import with limited compatibility.
Saying that it's not "serious" because "finite" is just weird. You could probably make (arbitrary number incoming) 464,567 different sounds with it. It's finite nature is so broad as to probably never really impact you. If there is a particular wavetable that you absolutely must use, the best way to deal with that is to figure out how to get there another way. This is agreat boost for creativity and I've learned a heap about sound design with Mx as a result. I appreciate limitations because they represent a very effective way to enhance creativity. Maybe you don't and that's totally fine.
Teksonic isn't actually "right" because he was responding to my opinion. His perspective on what I feel is as irrelrvantt as what shoes you've got on while I'm writing this. He can disagree but then it's like me arguing against his aversion to spaghetti. Im not saying that it absolutely shouldnt allow wavetable import. I'm just saying that for me, it's no longer a big deal. If it is for you, simply don't use the synth.
