![]() ![]() You can change either one of these samples to a different sound, giving it a totally different feel. Tweaking sounds to make them unique is very fun and intuitive. Coming from the creators of Trilian (dedicated bass synth) you wouldn't expect any less. There is a huge variety of bass and lead synths. Things like organic percussions, ethnic instruments, ambient noise, etc. Since it is a sampler/synth combo, it comes loaded with some fantastic organic sounds. ![]() Does a great job with not only pads, but living and breathing background ambiances. It's really great for 'evolving' ambience and soundscapes. Here's a couple points to note that weren't mentioned: You have hundreds of options for choir and piano presets. It comes loaded with 12,500 presets, all of which are useful and extremely high quality. Here is an in depth response I made for this question a month ago: It's going to be much quicker to get an idea down using Nexus if you're going after the generic future bass and bass house sounds, but the ceiling is lower as far as what you can do with it. That being said, the sounds are not particularly unique or huge sounding, but its a good synth if all you need is a little extra glue to finish your song. Their packs are typically geared towards whatever is "in" right now, and do a pretty solid job at emulating current sounds. Nexus on the other hand focuses on being a tool for producers that want a quick commercial EDM sound. Everything sounds great in omnisphere, and there is a lot more flexibility to customizing and programming patches than in Nexus. It's great for big lush pads or interesting sounding leads and bass sounds, and a lot of sounds tend to be very big full spectrum sounds. Omnisphere has many high quality organic sounding patches, and there are a TON of high quality sounds included. They are both very different synths that excel at different things.
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