bigcupholder
Member
"Feel obsolete"? Key word is "feel". It's all in your head. The unit will not sound any worse in ten years than it does now. It's still cheaper than buying a bunch of tube amps and pedals, which IMO are far more obsolete for most usage (considering how many hoops most people jump through to make their tube amps sound good at a reasonable volume). IIRC there's only a couple companies left that even make vacuum tubes and only in countries with lax environmental laws.So I bought an Axe-FX III mk II almost a year ago, so I’m just stuck with that right? And the only way to get a turbo is to buy one for $2500? It says it’s an “option” on the store but it’s not something I can just buy for $200 for my AFX3 mk II and install, right? It’s just straight up a different model?
That’s one of the only things I don’t like about modelers/all this guitar technology. It’s one thing with NI guitar rig and stuff that’s good but so cheap like that where the inevitable upgrades are negligible, but a very expensive hardware based best in class one like the AFX3 that’s the same price as a really good tube amp that stays a really good tube amp for as long as it works and doesn’t feel obsolete in a short time frame when there’s some no brainer upgrade to the modeler you paid like $2200 only a year ago, that kind of stings. And yes I know I don’t “need” the latest and greatest and my AFX3 is still good and everything, it’s just for that kind of price can’t help feeling like of course you wish you waited or something, and the mk II was brand new when I got it even. I know it’s just the nature of technology but like I said it’s just the one aspect I don’t like vs. physical amps (well that plus the amp in the room sound).
Maybe someday modeling technology will hit a plateau where there's really no perceptible improvements or useful features left to add, but until that time we should be happy to see things continue to improve and understand it doesn't make what you have currently any worse.