Great job with the namm q+a, nice one dude. Cool to hear the 16 levels timestrech def confirmed.
Seems like you and Andy have a line of communication open now? If you're bouncing feature request over to him here's a few things I haven't seen from vids, dunno for sure if v2 has them or not. None of them are dealbreakers, grabbing a Live for sure, but still
Thanks man.
Parameter-locks (like Elektron + Push etc) - add a mode where the pads = 16 steps. Change pad banks to access different sets of 16 steps within longer sequences. Hold pad and tweak parameters to lock them to that step.
Arpeggio - look at op-1's new arpeggio for inspiration.
Multiple parameters per q-knob - kind of like Octatrack Scenes/Analog Four 'performance' knobs. Way more interesting for experimentation if you can set a bunch of various parameters across different fx and pitch etc assigned to one knob.
Ability to reverse layers + fx per layer (tho resampling could be OK as workaround)
Re-trigger depth - as an FX insert option possibly? With same controls as on octatrack and automatable.
FX - gritty spring reverb, tape sim, amp sim. Also some 'HQ' fx options. Better quality, as an option, where you use if you want better quality but reduces the total amount of fx you can run in a project, dependant on onboard cpu usage.
Portamento (Dunno if already onboard?)
Onboard FM synth - look at op-1 for inspiration. The 4 q-knobs would be perfect for that. Even if this was limited to only one instance per project due to Cpu limit. Would still be useful for portable.
Slice by transient with sensitivity controls.
Lfo destination for basically any parameter onboard. Fx, sample start/end point etc etc.
Overdub with undo/redo on an audio track.
Edit - also 'sample Layers on Keygroup instruments' with Amp envelope per layer. And/or fx per layer. Maybe some of this in there already? Would be amazing if the Keygroup functionality began to approach Kontakt in terms of sound design depth tho. Would love to see depth like this on there and a cpu metre, as opposed to keeping things kind of 'bread and butter' with hard limits. Possibly as an option in settings. 'secured mode' (limited, very clearly defined limitations/safe) vs 'advanced mode' (do what you like, keep an eye on cpu metre