That doesn't bother me at all, I just use Bitwig's LFOs and EGs. All I need from the synth is the analog emulation. But then Bitwig is sort of an instrument to me.zerocrossing wrote: Sun Jun 29, 2025 2:18 pm 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.
Just to wade into this discussion, I have 8 hardware synths and one small modular case. I have software emulations of some of those synths. Sometimes the convenience of the software is enough to override any advantage the hardware might have. Sometimes the physicality of the hardware overrides the additional features of the software.
Sometimes it's just about which seat I want to sit in, seriously!
I have zero hardware effects units. All my effects are done in software. I don't see that changing.
I occasionally feel silly for having spent money on hardware when the software is really good enough. I occasionally feel silly for having spent money on software when I already had hardware that did the job very well. Most of the time, though, I'm just having fun.
The real winner is the consumer.
