


I use Jamstix and Superior V2 most of the time.

If I wasn't so satisfied with S2.0, I'd give this a try, just to see (hear?). But I can't imagine this thing rivaling S2.0. finally, a company that put some effort into making their mp3's sound good. I like the original kit, and the Nir-Z snare.ĮDIT: Just went to listen to the Drumcore demo mp3's. I'm working on some tracks that make their drum sound better than their own demos do. But nothing compares to it once you've mastered it.Īlso, the demos on the Toontrack website don't do it justice, either. I've owned it since the day it was released and I'm still having trouble with tweaking, compressing, and level adjusting. EXCEPT for the fact that despite the new interface, S2.0 is still more complicated to mix than it needs to be. So really, unless you've got a negative bias against industry leaders, there's just no reason to avoid Superior 2.0 or Toontrack in general when it comes to drums. And if I had to pick a 2nd one, it would probably be EZdrummer, yet another Toontrack product. Keep in mind, before S2.0, the industry standard was DFH (Drumkit From Hell), also from the same company (Toontrack). And I can tell you without fail that the most serious product out there right now is Superior 2.0. I've tried or own Superior 2.0, EZdrummer, BFD2, Session Drummer and Addictive Drums. Just listened to Jamstix demos, and thought they sounded awful on their website.
