darkogav wrote:It seems to me ToneX is more for people that want a better representation of a particular well known guitar amp'ed sound as opposed to someone who want's to be able to tweak in a virtual enviroment different combinations of gear that would be impossible to do in a real world scenario. (I might be wrong)
Well, I don't know that you're necessarily wrong.
You might at least not be
very wrong.
Obviously, neither AmplITube nor Tonex are completely perfect simulations of everything that is possible in the real world, and because they approach the simulation of the real world in different ways, they have different strengths and different weaknesses for different use cases.
And I am sure everyone has different use cases and workflows, and different goals -- and thus different opinions -- but I tend to see Tonex principally as a "modeling-amp killer" for studio owners or players who have favorite gear or setups to which they would like easy access without the hassle of actually carting around or setting up all that gear. Tonex seems to be
really good at capturing the vibe of a particular chain, with the bonus that it has some controls for EQ, gain, etc. built in so that you can tweak a given tone for its context. But I really feel that Tonex is principally about "this is what the gear does, and if you want what the gear does, then this model will do it for you". In that sense, if you aren't interested in messing around with simulated controls for a lot of different parameters, you can just flip through Tonex models until you find the ones you like best for your purposes.
Perhaps it is because I am used to AmpliTube, but I tend to use it more frequently than Tonex. Having spent years
now doing it, I'm just used to messing around with virtual stomps, amps, and the (freakishly tweakable!) cab room. I haven't really got any real gear that I want to model, so Tonex is mostly about seeing if anyone else has a particular model that I feel does something I can't already do, or if any Tonex models of gear that isn't available in AmpliTube shows up. (Well, OK: I've got an old Russian Big Muff that I think about capturing in Tonex, but I'd mostly do it just for the fun of seeing what it is like to capture a model of a piece of hardware. There's perfectly useable modeled fuzz for me in AmpliTube, and the stock Tonex models include a Russian Big Muff capture!)
But AmpliTube and Tonex are both tools to get jobs done, and one or the other might be better for the particular job you have.
All that said, I wish the searching and sorting on ToneNet for Tonex were a bit more sophisticated. I want to click on column headings to sort them ascending or descending; I want to click on user icons for their info, or to see their other models. I wish there was more info about especially pedal model captures, since I feel like players tend to use dirt pedals with more extreme swings of settings than with amps. (Is the drive down and level up, as for a boost? Is everything dimed, like a death-metal HM-2? Are the settings all somewhere modest, like at noon?)
Oh, well. Tonex is fun and AmpliTube is fun and these are interesting times to be a guitarist. Seriously, even compared to just 10 years ago, the quality and flexibility of virtual amps and processing is just nuts.