@@MAXDECAY Got it. Cannot decide what to buy(i think im going crazy). apollo twin mkii duo or antelope audio zen go. What i would do is have my pedalboard and i would barely use any plug ins, just maybe some eq, a tad bit of reverb and thats it. IDK if the apollo twin mkii duo is worth the price, i would rather buy some more reverb pedals! you know.. heheh. Do you maybe have an opinion on this? is there any big difference in raw sound? And I would write some EP's for spotify and stuff. I would mainly do ambient oriented stuff with guitar. so I want a really good quality. Btw im using windows and I heard apollo doesnt is hardly compatible with windows.. alot of problems and stuff.
@@Wirus002 Haha I feel you. The Apollo is great but a big pro of it is the plugins. If you don't need those I would skip it. I'm thinking about trying one of their new Volt interfaces with the four inputs. The Apollo was a pain to set up on PC (I don't even remember how I got it to work now), but once I got through that it has been running flawlessly. I'm not an expert on this, but if we're disregarding the plugins, I don't think the sound quality would be noticeably different from another quality interface. The one thing that I feel has improved my sound the most in terms of clarity and quality is the 29 Pedals EUNA. The Harmonics switch on that changed the game for me. Also, you can never have enough reverb pedals :)
@@MAXDECAY Yeah, 29 pedal even looks interesting on the pedalboard,I am planning to get it, just not sure if i would need to buy two of them since my setup is stereo. god damn! everything costs so much and i am spending money that i dont have! haha
@@Wirus002 The EUNA is meant to go at the front of the chain, so that would go before any stereo splitting. Unless you're running stereo outputs from your guitar or something.