danyeo1
Well-known member
Rufuss Sewell said:danyeo1 said:Honestly, i could care less about any Brit style tones so they should have left off any Edge or Crunch.
Haha, what were they THINKing?!? As if they were trying to make the amp to your specifications. Haha.
They SHOULD have left off edge and crunch because you specifically could care less about Brit tones? Do you know how ridiculous that sounds?
Sorry, I don't mean to be an ***, but I see this weird self centered attitude all the time when it comes to products intended for the masses. You do realize there are people who will buy the V JUST for edge and/or crunch right? I run a recording studio and I bought a V because of it's versatility. I know with one amp I can get pretty much any genre covered. But I don't need a channel switching pedal. I can't believe those idiots included channel switching when I don't even need it. Didn't they think to call and ask me first??? Haha.
Sorry for the rant, this comment just put me over the edge and I had to reply.
Self centered attitude or an amp that makes sense. Take a step back and read the marketing for this amp again. It's supposed to be a collection of Mark series amps. But where's the Mark III? Do you recall using crunch or edge on any other Mark series amp?
If you bring up R2 on the Mark IV I'll laugh because that channel sucks balls.
And who ever made any popular recordings on R2 that made anyone want to try out these amps?
The point is, I'm not buying a Mark series amp for Brit tones when i can just go out and buy a Marshall. And I'm not saying the V won't be a great amp, if it cops the IIC+ than I'm onboard, I'm just saying it's not anywhere as versatile as it could have been for live use.