Artists in DSP put out Euclyd, a delay plugin that uses Euclidean rhythm math to space out echo taps in geometric patterns instead of just doing regular repeating delays. The company says the thing turns timing divisions into rhythmic structures that sound organic even though they come from precise mathematical spacing.
The plugin lets you mess with steps and taps to control how many divisions and active echoes show up in the pattern, and there are swing and feedback knobs that make the mathematical stuff feel less robotic. You can carve out frequencies with high-cut and low-cut filters, and the diffusion control smears the individual taps into softer spatial textures when you want clouds instead of distinct rhythms.
The software runs on Mac and Windows in VST3 and AU formats for 25 bucks during the intro period.
The plugin lets you mess with steps and taps to control how many divisions and active echoes show up in the pattern, and there are swing and feedback knobs that make the mathematical stuff feel less robotic. You can carve out frequencies with high-cut and low-cut filters, and the diffusion control smears the individual taps into softer spatial textures when you want clouds instead of distinct rhythms.
The software runs on Mac and Windows in VST3 and AU formats for 25 bucks during the intro period.