Audio nerds just got a cheap new toy to obsess over. United Plugins dropped Duoflux, a fresh creation from SounDevice Digital that moves past simple single-processor gear because it packs dual independent modulation engines inside one housing. This setup lets producers build crazy movement or deep textures since they can treat signals apart or mash them together.
The software rocks two separate engines that run seventeen unique algorithms like Vintage Chorus, Modern Rotary, Tremolo, and Phaser. Signals get divided between these sections using four distinct crossover methods based on Frequency, Volume, Stereo, or Mid/Side options.
One standout trick involves a dynamic split that applies specific effects to just the quiet or loud chunks of a track individually. To add some old-school grit, every mod section brings a dedicated Tape area where users tweak Saturation, Wow, Flutter, and Noise.
Knob twiddlers can adjust specific settings like Rate, Depth, Width, and Character while picking LFO shapes that go from sine waves to squares. The tool works with most DAWs supporting VST, AAX, or AU formats on Windows and macOS systems.
Snagging this thing costs fifteen euros during the launch window before it jumps back up to seventy-nine. Anyone wanting a test drive can grab a fifteen-day trial via the developer site.
The software rocks two separate engines that run seventeen unique algorithms like Vintage Chorus, Modern Rotary, Tremolo, and Phaser. Signals get divided between these sections using four distinct crossover methods based on Frequency, Volume, Stereo, or Mid/Side options.
One standout trick involves a dynamic split that applies specific effects to just the quiet or loud chunks of a track individually. To add some old-school grit, every mod section brings a dedicated Tape area where users tweak Saturation, Wow, Flutter, and Noise.
Knob twiddlers can adjust specific settings like Rate, Depth, Width, and Character while picking LFO shapes that go from sine waves to squares. The tool works with most DAWs supporting VST, AAX, or AU formats on Windows and macOS systems.
Snagging this thing costs fifteen euros during the launch window before it jumps back up to seventy-nine. Anyone wanting a test drive can grab a fifteen-day trial via the developer site.