Picture this: a compact beast that packs the wild, harmonic-rich essence of West Coast synthesis into a desktop unit you can actually afford to experiment with endlessly.
At its heart sits a Pittsburgh Modular-designed analog oscillator pumping out sine, triangle, and saw waves—mix them or FM modulate for gritty, evolving tones—routed through their legendary wavefolder that folds signals back on themselves to explode harmonics without cutting frequencies like a traditional filter. Shape it further with the Dynamics Controller, a clever all-in-one that mimics lowpass gates, VCAs, and envelopes for those signature plucky bings and bongs, plus dual analog LFOs (high range 2Hz-500Hz, low down to 41 seconds) and a digital multi-mod tool offering CV control, random steps, extra LFOs, or envelopes. It's fully patchable with 18 Eurorack-compatible points across eight modular-style sections, controllable via MIDI/CV, a 13-key button keyboard, or its 32-step sequencer (13 presets, generative mode, clock-synced arpeggiator, tap tempo, divider)—all in a 40HP slim case (25mm deep, 250mA +12V) that slides into racks or runs standalone with included power and cables.
Players dig its intuitive patching for instant inspiration and snarling leads, though some note the button keys take practice for fluid playing—still, it's a gateway to additive sounds that pairs perfectly with Cre8audio's lineup for affordable analog adventures.