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The Poly 6 has good solid filters, it's very fat and grunty when you need it, can stack up to 16 voices along with detune and spread. Also owned the MI, so IMO the PolySix, M1 and Wavstation are the three I would love to get. That is why I mentioned it (in your other thread). I use to own the hardware version way back in the early 1980's and love it. Which is what I sort of expected when I bought Mono/Poly, but after tweaking it for a bit trying to match a file that had been recorded w/ the Poly Six, though I could get in the ballpark, downloading the demo of Poly Six and giving it a shot I was settled in a matter of minutes. I feel I must add - for anyone who may be a bit less educated about those Korg synths (like yours truly), Poly Six isn't just a stripped down version of Mono/Poly. It's also cool that Modulation and Arps can be sync'd to host and it's easy enough setting up CC. Though I mostly recall the M1 and Poly 6, but I do trust that Wavestation is also pretty darn good after listening to demos on YouTube. IIRC Korg hardware, the sounds are quite rich and useable. So, newer systems should be adequate enough to run the MI, Poly6 and WaveStation simultaneously.īoth the M1 and WaveStation are 8x Multi-Part. M1 - Collections (Sounds) seems like they also included the kitchen sink. *Phew* OK, this time I've got to go and have my desserts.Įdit: Just got back to add links - these are 'old articles' but most of it still relevant: The M1 is good though with 8x multi and the IFX it will of course add some CPU overhead. The MS20 has a CPU Loading Threshold that can be set. Anyway, the CPU hit on older processors can peak 50% for the Wavestation but on newer processors it shouldn't go any more than say 25%. Quickly, I was reading interesting articles on SOS site 3 part + other articles. Ok, I almost forgot I had chicken soup on the stove simmering away.