
When you’ve finished tweaking, you simply close the screen and you’re back to your main rig overview. From here you get an enlarged view of the module you’re editing with easily-accessible controls for amps and pedals, plus the model finder drop-down menu allowing you to switch to different pedals or amps. Making changes to your pedals and amp is as simple as double-tapping an existing pedal, or pressing the add or replace buttons if you’re starting from scratch. So I can rock out and enjoy myself and record great sounding guitars in a mix, you get that with Bias.Bias has you covered for everything from the cleanest of cleans with models based on amps such as the Roland JC-120, right up to modern high-gain amps I appreciate a good organic sound but in a post organic world I could care less if my tone is as organic as a Marshall JCM 800, Mesa Rect, ENGL, or Peavy. Most guitar players uses some type of boost(clean/ distorted) or some overdrive to improve their sound, along with Eq and compression.īias is really for tone nerds trying to push the envelope, I'm looking for a sound close to this but I want to make it mine, not replicate what been done before me. Like most guitar amps, the drive and distortion pedals help tighten up the sound.

The Bias fx 2 give all the tools you need to shape a sound even further. The Bias amp plus the Celestion IR the pro comes with really enhance the tones you can achieve, with the addition of mic placements.

I have both Bias amp 2 and Bias Fx 2 Pro edition, they both sound great when you understand the tone shaping system they are going for, and from my experience with it the UI is user friendly.
