Once the patching is done, take that same “Omnisphere” file from your desktop, and drag it back into the Finder window you left open (just drag it normally it doesn’t need to be copied this time). I believe the keygen will inform you if the patch was successful, but I don’t have it open in front of me, so I’m not sure.Ħ. Now go to the keygen you have open, click patch, and then, in the browser that appears, find and select the “Omnisphere” file you copied to your desktop. Alternatively, you can right-click it, select “copy” from the menu, right-click on your desktop, then click “paste.” If you’ve done it correctly, a copy of the “Omnisphere” file will now be on your desktop. Hold down “alt/option” on your keyboard, then click and drag “Omnisphere” to your desktop. Inside you will find a single file named “Omnisphere”Ĥ. Your Finder window will now be open to a single folder named “Contents” click on it, then click on the folder titled “MacOS”. vst file, then click "Show Package Contents" in the drop-down menu.ģ. I assume you know where they are judging by your post.Ģ. I found the much higher price tag to be a deterrent, especially because I felt Falcon's structure (or lack thereof, in a sense) might be a workflow hazard for me. From conversations I've had with him, he seems to love Falcon. I just imported a keyfile.Įdit - Re: how it stacks up against Falcon, I've got no idea. I've seen gys on KVR talking about soft eLicenser, but if it's communicated with my eLCC I didn't know about it. tame enough that I've made several tracks with just Avenger and a couple drum synths (and post FX of course).Īs far as protection, it doesn't use the eLicenser dongle like the rest of their plugins. I'm on Windows and it runs smooth and stable with negligible CPU hit on an i7. Warning, though - some Mac users complain about CPU spikes, cpu consumption, and stability issues. And it does some FM but you can't really modulate a modulator osc without some pretty crafty workarounds. Harmor's the only truly good option for that as far as I've seen. it has an FET editor with some modulation functions, but it can't do any deep additive synthesis. I bought it on sale for like 175 but 220 is a fair price IMO. It's a monster synth in a surprisingly fast/easy interface. Then all bets are off.Īnyway, you get the point. but Vengeance is talking about adding drum synths to the drum section. which I haven't touched because I like Kick 2 and Punchbox. It's even got a whole drum library and drum sequencer in addition to the synth engine's arp and mod sequencer. you just have to consult the manual a handful of times at first because its UI is so densely populated with useful features). It's a lot like Serum but with a lot more features, at the expense of some of its zippy ease (but not too much. and the sheer size of the FX suite go way above most of what I've seen, especially in a relatively easy to use (and not hideous) UI. It's still missing a few things (most painfully for me, a wet/dry knob on the filters), but for the most part the oscillator functions, routing options, internal mixer, FX busses and sends, etc. In practice it's replaced most of my synth collection tbh. If you're into making your own sounds, Avenger is worth its price tag several times over. If you're looking for a great library, I'd vote Omnisphere 101 times out of 100. I guess you could get the Vengeance expansions for. It's got a great browser, but the presets are very EDM focused. Click to expand.Depends what you want to use it for.