If you do take the time to get your head around this thing, you will be rewarded with drum sounds the likes of which NOBODY else is using, period. Talk about time consuming?! Jesus fucking christ. It's taken me literally a week and a bit to actually figure out what the manual is trying to get across regarding how you edit a timbre, and that stays edited, then you go into the kit part and fiddle with the timbres assigned to a pad, and then go about editing all the pads to build a kit. It's fucking HARD AS HELL to use and people who give up easily will probably throw this fucking HUGE bastard of a machine straight out the window in no time at all. What the fuck Korg was thinking with this thing, who the hell knows. You can build kits, then make patterns and even songs, and it has an internal effects processor and a shit-ton of outputs. The premise seems simple enough: two timbres can be combined to make a sound that you assign to a drum pad in a kit. Damn near need a fucking Doctorate in codebreaking to figure out how this thing fucking works. Boy, was he NOT kidding at all about this thing. I recently saw a video done by AudioPilz about the S3 being a "Drum Machine Mystery" and thought "Heh, really?" Found one for $45 on the auction and said yeah Let's see about this. Wanna talk about CRYPTIC?! Jesus fucking christ on a motorized 4WD pogo stick with turbo and a Yoshimura exhaust system.
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