The JS plugins native to Reaper are case and point. It is interesting about the effect of a good GUI to add eye candy to the function of a plugin, and how we tend to react. Cannot argue with the price or the intent of the offering. Whatever you think of Reaper or no matter where you end up with a DAW of choice, would highly recommend you check this out. Also does all the external hardware banks if you got a custom file for a DX7 or the like. Don’t know why nobody thought of this before. Allows fixed pitch wheel mod to get the instrument in tune without resampling. I use this mostly for tuning midi instruments. Nobody else so far has published anything close to this. If you have anything to do with a keyboard and midi, this is available in the suite, mind blowing. Compare objective to the hi end commercial products. Record a couple seconds of the noise floor and take it out. Same or better than the Adobe noise analysis algorithm. Many applications, but use the noise extraction function. If you ain’t got Melodyne, ReaTune does the same thing in the correction tab. ReaTune, really good guitar tuner, sensitive enough to show the jitters in a string trying to reach equilibrium. Makes some sort of primal sense to a guitar player. ReaEQ, one of the coolest and functional eq programs available. Can’t say enough good about these, though some I use less than others. They just threw this out there in cyberspace as a gift for the sake of rock n’ roll. You may hate Reaper with a passion, but don’t think there is a lot of argument about the utility and integrity of the vst version of their native vst suite. Don’t matter what DAW you use as long as it supports vst protocol. Dear Friends, As we are moving to other platforms, wanted to put in another good word for the incredible vst plugins offered free from the Reaper guys.