You've made one embarrassingly uninformed statement after another. You really should learn when to stop.BONES wrote: Sun Apr 02, 2023 1:03 amSorry, not even close. I had a Pulse 2 but I got rid of it. It was way too anodyne for my liking. I like Rocket's sound (and immediacy) more. And there is no way in hell I'd swap my Uno Pro for my bandmate's Subsequent 37. f**king ladder filters, spare me days! I wouldn't even have swapped my original Uno for the S37. And that's ignoring the fact the S37 cost him four times more than Uno Pro cost me (and more like 8 times what you can get them for now). He's woken up to it, too, I can't remember the last time he used his S37 at all. We'll probably take it on stage next time we play, just because it looks so cool, but it will be all for show.Big Mouth Strikes Again wrote: Sat Apr 01, 2023 11:23 pmIt's taken you two years to figure out that a 3-oscillator VCO monosynth sounds better than your GForce and FBM synth plugins? i guess better late than never. But I could have told you this in the first two minutes of playing the Uno Pro.BONES wrote: Sat Jan 28, 2023 1:17 amI'm pretty sure my Uno Pro sounds better than any equivalent softsynth in my arsenal. The important qualifier here is "equivalent", which means a monosynth without any unison capability. But it includes two of my favourite VSTi, GForce's SEM and FBM's MonoFury, so it's no faint praise.
Then there's the fact that the Uno Pro is not a massive leap forward in hardware designs. I can name at least 10 better sounding / more functional analog monosynths:
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The more knobs/sliders, the more shit that's never in the right spot when you go to adjust it. Absolutely useless on stage. It's got to be endless rotary encoders or nothing.These were just a few of the monosynths that feature a display and patch storage. It we eliminate these constraints we have:
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This is far from an exhaustive list. But many, if not most, of these synths sound better than the Uno Synth Pro. They are also often easier to use due to their more faithful and expansive knob/slider layout.No, there aren't. None of them are worth what they cost, even Uno Synth Pro, and we'd never even contemplate using any of them in production. They simply don't stack up to even cheap VSTi. e.g. Uno Synth Pro can sound ever so slightly bigger than GForce's SEM but, like every synth in each of your lists, it is absolutely crushed by bx_oberhausen with it's 32 voice unison capability. Then there are stupidly cheap VSTi that can also outperform anything in your lists. At the moment you can pick up Soundspot's Union for $20 and it is just about the hugest sounding synth in all of creation. I'd' take that over anything in your list, every day of the week.So it's not a "battle" between the Uno Synth Pro and the entire plugin world. There are other VCO monos that can crush the best VST monosynths.
Yes, I know you specifically said "VST monosynths" but that's kind of my point - you have to have very, very narrow criteria in order for hardware to make any kind of sense at all and thos ekinds of distinction in the VST world are pointless and meaningless. If someone makes a VSTi monosynth, they are doing it for stupid reasons, because it doesn't cost a penny more to make a polysynth. That's why bx_oberhausen will always beat SEM and OB-E and it's why software synths will always be better than hardware in every way.
Why isn't it enough that the Uno Pro is a surprisingly good sounding three oscillator VCO mono synth?
Of course, the Uno Pro doesn't outshine any of the synths I listed. But that's okay. At $300, the Uno Pro is a great sounding monosynth.