*Only* four filters? I mean two is an unusual luxury on most polysynths. Remember, this is per-voice, on a polysynth. I expect that if you put unlimited filters in there, people would complain that Zebra was poorly optimised because they couldn't play chords on their sound that *only* used 14 high-quality filters per voice.charlesnyiha wrote: Thu Jan 01, 2026 5:44 am Why are there limitations on the number of modules - why only 4 filters for example? Why not just have a filter option, and allow people to put as many filters as they want?
I get some limitations can be annoying, but my view generally is to explore what I *can* do on an instrument, rather than dwell too much on what it can't. And if for some reason you want to make sounds that are super complex and beyond what you can do on regular synths, you're probably looking at a different product like Reaktor, or a modular system, where you can rig up whatever you want to your hearts content - Zebra was never intended to replace those, but instead bring some of the flexibility of modular type systems into a more conventional polysynth framework - hence being described as "semi-modular". Do any non-modular polysynths have an option for unlimited filters per voice these days? Certainly not any of the ones I have, but maybe there are...
Given how much you can do with a single oscillator (including filtering), I don't really see *only* four filters (or oscillators etc) as some kind of problem in practice. (Others may have different opinions, that's fine.) In fact, if anything, one thing I'm often surprised at when going through Zebra presets is for such a complex sound, how *little* modules are often used in a patch. More is not always more. Having said that, Zebra 3 is at the beginning of it's cycle, so it's possible that things might change over it's lifespan according to customer demand and available CPU power.

