![]() Listen to the new sounds you can get out of it:īut it doesn’t sample the Sega. Whoa – if none of that meant anything to you, think of it this way: this is a polyphonic, multi-layered recreation of a 4-voice FM synth with a stupid amount of sound controls and grungy retro sample playback as a separate feature. For Sega game fans, this is your new iTunes. If you want to hear those vintage soundtracks the way they were intended to be heard, there’s even a VGM player. (Also, you will have to account for some lost musical productivity when this makes you want to play Sega games again.) Or you know, just sit back and listen to some classic Sega game scores. You get the authentic sounds of the Sega hardware, modeled with bit-for-bit accuracy – but a deep interface you’d expect from a modern plug-in. There’s even a recreation of the crunchy lo-fi sample playback. So, for you, yes, there’s a bit-accurate emulation of the OPN2 YM2612 chip and SN76489-compatible square wave core (SPSG). If you’re a Sega fan, you know the sound of this instrument from the sunny, sparkling, high-energy game soundtracks of the era. And now you get an accurate, powerful version as a plug-in, in chipsynth MD from Plogue. It was also a powerful FM synth – seriously. ![]() The Sega Genesis, aka Mega Drive, was more than just a beloved game console. ![]()
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