Far from it :D Well the first generation was tedious to work with for a few reasons, but the 20 and 30 series have stuff worked out and they're one of the most pick-up and play synths out there. Punching in notes / rythm is easy, the most annoying part of these things would be you bump in limitations (sound design, key/scales, voices/instruments), guess that's the trade-off for cheap and easy.
@@SadiquecatPlus For me I'd want to practice on a proper MPC all of these devices are something I would of enjoyed in high school learning the EDM craft.
@@RetroPlus I second this, the Po-33 is an amazing sampler and sampler workflow! There is Koala sampler and a Pocket Operator app for google pixels. Also worth checking out is Flip by Andrew Huang, but we're diverging from the Po vibe.
Cool demo! I really enjoy these mobile types of synths. Looks painful in practice!
Far from it :D
Well the first generation was tedious to work with for a few reasons, but the 20 and 30 series have stuff worked out and they're one of the most pick-up and play synths out there.
Punching in notes / rythm is easy, the most annoying part of these things would be you bump in limitations (sound design, key/scales, voices/instruments), guess that's the trade-off for cheap and easy.
@@SadiquecatPlus For me I'd want to practice on a proper MPC all of these devices are something I would of enjoyed in high school learning the EDM craft.
@@TradieTrev I highly recommend the PO-33 KO, if you don't get any of these just get that one. Trust me, it's an incredible device.
@@RetroPlus I second this, the Po-33 is an amazing sampler and sampler workflow!
There is Koala sampler and a Pocket Operator app for google pixels.
Also worth checking out is Flip by Andrew Huang, but we're diverging from the Po vibe.