I enjoy modeling amps. They have a giant array of sounds and let me cover sounds that'd require pedals and effort to even get close to. While I have a Fender Twin Reverb, I really don't want to dig it out when the next few things I'm going to play should sound like they came from a Marshall from the 80s.
Of course, this is just a practice amp. I can't control it with a fancy pedal like I can a Kemper. At best, I can get a single button pedal that only allows A/B settings - so you can have two profiles and switch between them.
I am in my own bed. My dog won't leave me alone. He's missed me.
Being in your own bed after having been gone for a while is a great feeling.
It's made to give the beginner a lot of sound choices and thats awesome.
Yup - and the great thing is that these various tones are tones they'll encounter in the real world.
They're legit close to the originals.
They have tracks you can play along with - and they're actually played by humans.
Its awesome for beginners to have tracks to play along with, it is not easy to make just a single guitar sound be musical when you are just starting out. Having backing tracks to fill in the blanks would help a lot of beginners. Plus it is fun to play leads over backing tracks when you get better
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