garfy wrote:Have you tried the free AmpliTube 4 Custom Shop version? This will let you work with the interface and test out the included free gear in AT4. You can then have any of the pieces of gear available for a free trial so you can make up your own mind.
I second garfy's suggestion. The free models that come with the "Custom Shop" are basically where I started, and then I slowly built up a collection of stuff that I particularly wanted (by purchasing either individual gear models or particular bundles/collections).
The fact that you can try stuff out for free for 72 hours is a hugely undervalued feature of the Custom Shop. Sometimes I don't get stuff I thought I might want, sometimes I end up getting stuff that I hadn't realized would work. But you really feel that you are getting a chance to see how things really work for you -- because you are.
Honestly, if you run a studio or record/mix lots of different guitarists from different genres (or you play in a crazily diverse assortment of genres), then, sure: getting the whole AmpliTube package at one may be what you want. But if you are just, like, "I want some tones, and I know what some of them need, but maybe I don't know about other things that might be useful", then grab the free Custom Shop install and play around. I mean, you can always then still decide to buy the whole AmpliTube package -- or just bits of it.