One thing I've brought up that keeps getting ignored is that in high quality analog emulations, the feature set is considerably lower than a Moog One. I consider the UAD Minimoog the "gold standard" for analog emulation, and it's a mono synth that's not much more than a hardware Minimoog. Why isn't there a great analog emulation that has 4 LFOs and 3 EGs? This idea that software always trumps hardware is just incorrect. Not when doing a good approximation of analog, it doesn't.crimsonwarlock wrote: Sun Jun 29, 2025 7:40 amFirst of all, we all know that software can do things that are impossible to do in analog hardware. Secondly, any hardware synthesizer that has more features than a Moog One (easy to imagine) can do things that a Moog One can't.IvyBirds wrote: Sun Jun 29, 2025 12:40 am Awesome so if so post a sound from a software synth that the Moog One can't do that means that software is the clear winner right?
There's only one way to do that, and it's not easy. You have to have both instruments at hand and carefully make adjustments to make the parameters equal. Even a slight change in oscillator gain can make a huge difference in the final results in sounds that are more than just detuned oscillators that are going though a modulated filter.No no no, let's not go there again. We've already seen how demo videos used for comparisson went apples and oranges from the start._leras wrote: Sun Jun 29, 2025 3:16 am Or just post a video of a soft synth that matches one of the Moog One videos.
It is simple: post ONE Moog One sound that has a sound and/or quality that is not possible in software. You need only one sound to make that point. Let's hear it![]()
