My gut tells me I would have way more fun with Wavestate hardware than Wavestate Native, plus I would not have to worry about configuring a MIDI keyboard controller, but my practical side says that since I already have a good MIDI keyboard controller, plus I can avoid menu diving, that Wavestate Native is better, and my super-practical side says that maybe iWavestation on my iPad is good enough, or there is some other iOS app which equals Wavestate Native for less cash. Am I correct in assuming that with Wavestate hardware you get the advantage of dedicated knob twiddling, meaningful resale value, and a keyboard, with the disadvantage of some menu diving? Wavestate Native is $200 whereas Wavestate hardware can be purchased used for about $450. It uses multiple sound layers, each of which can contain a wave sequence of multiple PCM samples or a standard multisample patch, and can be stacked or split across the keyboard. Is Wavestate Native easy to setup with most any good MIDI keyboard controller? Inspired by Korg’s classic Wavestation, Wavestate Native is powered by Korg’s Wave Sequencing 2.0 engine. I have iWavestation on my iPad, and I'm interested in Wavestate Native (or maybe Wavestate hardware) but only if it's a meaningful improvement over iWavestation.ĭoes Wavestate Native sound significantly different / better than iWavestation?ĭoes Wavestate Native have sufficient functionality so that any good MIDI keyboard controller will give you an equivalent feature set as compared to Wavestate hardware?
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