Hi KVR,
I released Dream Circuit this week — a stereo chorus for Windows, VST3 only.
WHAT IT DOES
Dream Circuit runs three chorus voices simultaneously at slightly different speeds and timings to produce stereo width and movement. Feedback recirculates the chorus output rather than the dry signal, so it builds from warm thickening into swirling textures without low-end rumble. The output stage has a built-in limiter so you can push the trim without clipping your master bus.
KEY FEATURES
· 3-voice stereo chorus
· Rate, Depth, Mix, Feedback, Output (−24 to +12 dB with limiter)
· Insert mode (Mix control) and Return mode (100% wet, one click) for send/return buses
· Up to 8× oversampling — available options adapt to your session's sample rate
· 50 factory presets across five categories: subtle, classic, ensemble, vibrato, experimental — all editable, unlimited user preset saves
· Input and output meters with peak hold and clip indicators
· Full automation support, all parameters save/restore with the DAW session
WORKS WELL ON
Guitar, keys, synths, vocals, pads, ambiences
FORMAT / PLATFORM
VST3 — Windows only
PRICING
$40 — intro pricing active now, use code DRIFTLAB for 50% off.
10-day free trial available, no sign-up required.
https://driftlabaudio.com/dream-circuit
Happy to answer questions.
Driftlab Audio
[New Release] Dream Circuit — Stereo Chorus (VST3/Win) by Driftlab Audio
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- KVRer
- 8 posts since 17 Mar, 2026
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- KVRAF
- 2707 posts since 23 Mar, 2005 from Detroit
Does the built-in limiter introduce latency? If so, please have an option to turn it off
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 8 posts since 17 Mar, 2026
The output "limiter" is actually a soft clipper (tanh saturation) followed by a hard clip safety net - both per-sample, instantaneous operations. No lookahead, zero latency, nothing that would show up as plugin delay in your DAW.
On the bypass idea: the soft clipper is intentionally in the signal path rather than just a protection stage. It's what keeps high-feedback settings sounding musical instead of harsh. That's why there's no bypass planned, but I understand the ask.
Thanks for the question!
- Driftlab Audio
On the bypass idea: the soft clipper is intentionally in the signal path rather than just a protection stage. It's what keeps high-feedback settings sounding musical instead of harsh. That's why there's no bypass planned, but I understand the ask.
Thanks for the question!
- Driftlab Audio
