![]() There's a little learning curve in adjusting if you're used to another DAW, but that's to be expected. The audio editing and MIDI functionality all works fine for me. The included plugin set (it's an optional tick box in the installer) is all useable - there's no fancy graphics on the front ends, it's all just sliders and parameter value displays, but they all sound fine and do the job they're meant to do, and there's a pretty broad selection of them. I've since moved over to use it for all my mixing and editing. It's a lot less bloated and hungry than other DAWs I've used, and proved to be a solid choice for the job. I do more live engineering than studio these days, and my initial use case for Reaper was as a very stable, resource efficient and lightweight platform for capturing live multitracks at shows. I started out using Cakewalk in the late 90s, before moving to Cubase, which I happily used in studios and at home for a long time. ![]()
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