With this, Bias Desktop can analyze live or recorded guitar tone and recreate the sound for your own use, a feature that was only available from premium amp and effects modelers. Instead of just being a straightforward port of the iOS app version, Positive Grid adds a nifty feature called Amp Matching. This means you can share your custom presets with other users, or try out the multitude of other user designed amps. You can upload or download custom amp creations to ToneCloud, Bias’ own amp-sharing platform. Sharing of presets is now becoming a standard feature of many amp modelers, and the upcoming Bias Desktop is not an exception. It lets you alter the design of your virtual amp until you find the sound that you want. Instead of merely shaping the tone with EQ controls, Bias lets you modify the virtual parts of your amp by changing the tubes, preamp, transformer, tone stacks, cab and mic. To start with, you have 36 recreations of popular vintage and modern amps, which you can then use to customize your own amp. The feature that popularized Bias, Amp Designer, is still at the heart of this plug-in. Bias Desktop carries the features found in the original iOS app and comes with an innovative addition called Amp Matching.
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