
RKM wrote:didn't know enough to correct them then, still don't, think they mean it's easier to learn fl than ableton but once you have ableton down it's easier to make better music That being said, for yourself, it comes with no sound generation plugins that I am aware of.but if you are willing to spend all that money on Ableton.you could get Reaper AND some plug ins.not to mention there truly are plenty of great freeware plugins out these days. Also, Reaper is unbelievably cheap and comes with some pretty great plug ins. Thinking of switching s stupid cluttered with windows.recent upgrades haven't really dealt with any of my major complaints with the program.Ableton doesn't fix any of my major complaints (PDC mostly) AND it seems people have more issues with syncying Ableton to hardware than with FL Studio, so for me its not really an option. That said, I'm pretty close to bailing on FL Studio even with life time upgrades.not to Ableton though.probably Reaper. So now it's onwards and upwards into 2020 with plenty more exciting and long-awaited, new features coming.I don't get why you would have to buy plug ins with FL Studio.the XXL version comes with a shit ton of plugins, more than Ableton, and probably still comes in at hundreds less. How expensive is FL Studio?įL STUDIO has topped the MusicRadar Best DAW poll (again).

There are also online DAWS - do a Google search for that and you'll find lots. They are complicated programs, so are expensive to write and maintain, and the market for a full on professional DAW is limited to a few thousand copies worldwide, which makes the cost per unit for development and maintenance very high. Avid has implemented some pretty solid stock plugins in Pro Tools.
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Fl Studio is one of the most packed DAW's with a diversity of good stock plugins.

Logic Pro is probably the Digital Audio Workstation with the biggest variety of good native plugins.
