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Quick comparison video of Superior Drummer (SD3) and Get Good Drums (GGD). SD3 is more of a fully fledged plugin, so it's apples to oranges but wanted to highlight key differences to help prospective buyers make a more informed decision.
Both sound pretty good, but SD3 stands out to me as having more options and overall utility for a producer/songwriter. However, the GGD kits are much more economical and concise as far as price point and features. I was a bit disappointed in the stability of GGD causing CPU overload in Pro Tools (see video), which was a surprise. SD3 is taxing on the CPU but stable.
Sound wise, SD takes the cake for me, but if you make relevant styles of music GGD will sound great.
My search for an all-encompassing drum plugin solution in AAX plugin format has been endless and disappointing. SD3 is bloated with mixing and sequencing features that are cool but miss the mark on what I need to speed up my creativity. It also does not let you browse through your own sample library, which would have been a huge feature.
A lot of these drum plugins (e.g. Maschine, Geist, SD3) are trying to reinvent the wheel by including extensive sequencing and mixing features that are sub par compared to what DAWs are capable of in 2020. I wish they would focus more on useful production and songwriting features like a better browser, easy sample swapping, lots of kits etc. rather than mixing features. Pro Tools, Logic, Cubase etc. are already the best mixing and audio sequencers for over 20 years, why do you want to reinvent that?
14 окт 2024