My advice to add is never pay full price for anything because it always goes on sale by as much as 50% or more (except superior drummer 3 haha) and many free plugins are very good. A different one with better presets and UI might get you where you're going faster. Some free and stock plugins are good but not always novice/user friendly. Plugins with less settings were better when i started out. The other thing is that some user interfaces are just better for different people. It's more like i read about it or saw it on sale and after investigating what it did, thought it might be cool. That being said i didn't blindly buy things. I'm not going to negate anything you said but I've definitely stumbled upon great things that i didn't know i wanted by buying stuff i didn't technically need but made a use for it after haha. If you have something specific you think you need OP just ask (saturation, vsti's, delays, guitar fx etc) I have a pretty extensive list of available freeware links. I'll stop there so this list doesn't get too ridiculous lol. Ive found the Reaper stock options to feel like a clunky workflow. This is just a nice suite of versatile plug-ins.įor metering. I think both of these Reverbs are very good. I use the Flanger, Phaser and FreqAnalyst all the time still. IME you can fill up your hard drive pretty fast and not have enough room left to manage the projects you're working on.Īs far as free vst's you should absolutely grab IMO. OP I highly recommend grabbing an offboard SSD memory drive for your libraries, and at least 1 one for backing up everything, if you're going to buy anything. They tend to be very 1 purpose instruments, that may need minor tweaks, but many do that 1 thing well. (dx7's, rhodes, acoustic piano's, classic synths etc) And to add to this, spitfire curates a lot of their stuff from here for labs, has a bunch of free instruments from samplists.
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