I would think any decent amp would have some sort of aux input, especially when they are aimed at beginners.
As long it gets some good sounds it should be just fine and I bet it is plenty loud
From a quick flip through, it sounds awesome. It sounds like a tube amp in lots of ways, including tube amp volume.
Once again, this $140 amp (free shipping - and seemingly brand new) sounds about what I've have expected from a $600 amp from the early 2000s. Plus, I'd have needed another $500 for pedals.
We're truly in a heyday of guitar.
Amusingly, just a few years ago they were proclaiming the guitar to be dead, saying that it was going out of fashion. There were tons of articles on the subject - even Rolling Stone declared the age of the guitar over.
Then, the pandemic hit - and everyone bought guitars.
As I've mentioned before - start watching the used market as things go back to normal. Probably a year or so after things are back to normal, watch for used guitars. We're going to be swimming in used guitars.
I have never had an amp that contained pedal sounds beyond a footswitch for distortion or clean
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.
(post is archived)