Terrible. I’m sorry. The clean tones are sterile, digital, and have a weird "zipper" noise when you roll down the guitar volume. It sounds like a $50 solid-state practice amp from 1992. Avoid.
Sometimes, progress isn't linear. We lost a little bit of weird, chaotic fun when amp sims became perfect. If you find an old CD-R or a cracked .DLL file on an archived hard drive, give the SoftAmp GT one last spin. Just don't look at the GUI.
Have you ever used the AXP SoftAmp GT? Do you still have a license file kicking around? Let me know in the comments below. AXP SoftAmp GT
Twenty years later, does this "forgotten" software amp sim still hold a secret sauce for guitar tone?
But the SoftAmp GT has character . It is the cinematic equivalent of using a VHS tape effect. It degrades the signal in a musical way. When I played it, I stopped thinking about "zero latency" and "oversampling" and just started riffing. Terrible
Enter AXP (Audio Xciter Products). They weren't trying to model a specific Marshall JCM800 or a Fender Twin. Instead, the was an analog-modeled hybrid. It took the preamp topology of a high-gain American head, blended it with the power amp sag of a British class A, and threw in a proprietary "Dynamic Convolution" cabinet section.
The internal cabinet resonance algorithm, while innovative, sounds like a blanket over the speaker. Instead, route the raw preamp output into a modern Impulse Response loader (like NadIR or Pulse). It sounds like a $50 solid-state practice amp from 1992
Getting it to run on a modern DAW requires a bridge like jBridge (for Windows) or running it inside a sandbox like 32 Lives (now defunct on Mac). I dug out an old Dell Latitude running Windows 7 32-bit with Reaper 4.78 to test this natively.