Apologies if this comes off as rude, but I can't help feel you're doing your plugin a disservice showing it as a guitar distortion without running it through a Cab IR like a typical metal guitar chain. It's too brittle without a cab. Cool plugin none the less and sounds amazing on the synth!
@@servicestuffs2549 Check out Resington here on youtube if you want free IR packs. He has a few really nice ones! No need to pay for decent IR's esp if just getting into cab IR's :)
Really cool track Ari and nice guitar play! When will Damaged Guitars be released? 😉 Fury is a cool and aggressive sounding plug-in, really looks like a lot of fun to play around with!
Sounds nice! Is the only reason to use a DI for the guitar signal to reduce noise that would otherwise ruin the distortion? I just ask why not directly through an audio interface with Hi-Z JFET input?
Hey there, thanks for writing in. We actually wanted to see how far we could push a guitar sound using just FURY, and no additional gain staging or amplification.
That Hi-Z input is basically a DI, so it's six of one, and half a dozen of the other. DI is commonly used to refer to a signal direct from the instrument, without passing through pedals, amplifiers, speakers, etc.
@@JonathanKillstringI see, thanks for the clarification. I assumed that a typical DI box unit was additionally used to get a balanced signal into the audio interface via XLR.
Where Punish is a channel strip style effect that I would generally consider to be a saturating compressor, Fury is more focused on distortion. As such Fury has more distortion algorithms (15 vs the 3 in punish) as well as different drive and tone modes. Fury also has modulation sources like LFO and a Sequencer, which Punish does not. So while they are both aggressive plugins, they are quite different in design and sound.
I agree with Christopher. The plugin is great, I saw reviews where it was used on synths, basses, drums etc. and it sounds really great. But honestly, I and say this as someone who LOVES your plugins, it sounds horrible on the guitar. Use it for 2 seconds as an effect in break riff but don't write "metal" with it. :)
Hi, thanks for writing in. To clarify, PUNISH is a channel strip-style effect, generally considered to be a saturating compressor. While FURY is solely focused on distortion. FURY has more distortion algorithms (15 vs 3 in PUNISH) and it has different DRIVE and TONE modes. Additionally, FURY has modulation sources that PUNISH does not have (LFO and a Sequencer). They are both aggressive however, they are very different in design and sound. Also, in case you were not aware, PUNISH and/or PUNISH Lite owners who have registered products, will get an additional 20% off on FURY, there will be a coupon in your account. Hope this helps. Cheers!