So far, initial impressions of Massive X on social media and by industry media have been pretty positive. A dedicated "Noise" section lets producers choose from more than 100 different sounds. The latter has two primary wavetable oscillators (the original has three), though you can add up to five by using the insert oscillators. According to the description on the Native Instruments website, Massive X is "built for a new decade and designed to evolve." While Massive has 80 wavetables, Massive X has over 170 wavetables. There's no cross-compatibility between the two synths, meaning there's no way to open any of Massive's presets on the newer instrument. The new plug-in isn't meant to be an update to Massive - instead it's a complete redesign of the original. Now, the company has released the widely anticipated successor to Massive, which it's deeming Massive X. The soft synth went on to define EDM as we know it today, for better or worse. Producers loved the three oscillator wavetable synth plugin - with its wave-scanning algorithms and 1,300 presets - for its vast options. ![]() When Native Instruments first released the virtual synth Massive in 2007, it quickly took the music production world by storm.
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