
Although it has filters, Bazille is basically an FM/phase distortion synth, not to be mistaken for virtual analog anything. Zebra 2 has been around for over a decade (with updates) but should get you a significant discount on Zebra 3, which has been in development for years without a clear release date but hopefully will come out some time in the next year or two. Zebra is more of a jack-of-all-trades and probably works better as a bread-and-butter synth. However it's a "virtual wires" semi-modular design so you have to be down for that sort of fiddly patching to really appreciate it.Īll these synths have playable demos, don't they? Honestly I think the best advice I could give is to try them out. I'm going to put a word in here for Bazille - probably actually the best choice in the U-He catalog for crazy digital/FM stuff, will definitely get you sounds you won't even get with popular wavetable synths. Maybe that makes it more of a pad synth but I'm sure you can get some dubstep stuff out of it.ĭiva is fantastic but it does vintage analog sounds so get it if you want to incorporate that sort of sound, not just super-modulated digital wavetable stuff. Zebra definitely has a more basic wavetable setup but it can do a lot - the routing is way more flexible than something like Serum. My guess is that the feature set is a little narrower than Serum (which is pretty much the modern standard for wavetable synths) but I'm not entirely sure - you might want to look into it. Hive has a wavetable implementation now and I'm sure it sounds great. If you believe your post or comment was removed in error, check the rules and include a link in a polite message to the moderators.

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