NDSP Quad Cortex

If you're happy with the sound and features of the QC as it is, its smaller size and existing ecosystem can be pros for a lot of people.

If I had to choose, part of me would want to go Helix Stadium for the eventual better captures (unless NDSP does some sort of update here), for Line 6's excellent support track record (!), for the better UI and screen (by all accounts), and for the presumed better build quality / quality control (and warranty service), but on the other hand the smaller size, multiple instrument inputs (when compared to the non-XL Stadium), and better reverb would all be big real world pluses for me. Helix's reverb is still lacking imo, and some of their modulation is too, and it doesn't seem like that will change soon, and the Stadium's size would involve me really changing around how I set things up, and at the gain of a lot of features I probably would not end up using.
One thing's for sure, though: NDSP won't get away with their absentee landlord routine for much longer. Not if the Helix team is as engaged as they were through the early years of the OG Helix. (Or right up to present, really.) I think Showcase is going to pull in a lot of customers once they start seeing the (many) practical applications, and if Line 6 continues to support with new features at their usual pace... it will be hard for anyone to ignore.
 
The Hotone Ampero 2 range is the "Dual Cortex" we never got. It genuinely keeps impressing me more often than not, considering its like 1/4 the QC price.

I feel NDSP is going to get squeezed on both ends. The cheaper stuff will keep getting better, and the HX Stadium is close enough to the QC pricing and size that it's going to appeal a lot of folks - especially those unhappy with NDSP's progress.
 
The Hotone Ampero 2 range is the "Dual Cortex" we never got. It genuinely keeps impressing me more often than not, considering its like 1/4 the QC price.

I feel NDSP is going to get squeezed on both ends. The cheaper stuff will keep getting better, and the HX Stadium is close enough to the QC pricing and size that it's going to appeal a lot of folks - especially those unhappy with NDSP's progress.
I was joking :grin
 
The Hotone Ampero 2 range is the "Dual Cortex" we never got. It genuinely keeps impressing me more often than not, considering its like 1/4 the QC price.

I feel NDSP is going to get squeezed on both ends. The cheaper stuff will keep getting better, and the HX Stadium is close enough to the QC pricing and size that it's going to appeal a lot of folks - especially those unhappy with NDSP's progress.
So the million dollar question is, how much of a margin has NDSP been enjoying per unit sale of QC? Because they're going to need a little haircut, I would think. If it's already close to cost, that would spell trouble. I doubt they can attribute enough of their plugin sales to QC owners to justify QC as a loss-leader product.
 
So the million dollar question is, how much of a margin has NDSP been enjoying per unit sale of QC? Because they're going to need a little haircut, I would think. If it's already close to cost, that would spell trouble. I doubt they can attribute enough of their plugin sales to QC owners to justify QC as a loss-leader product.
It isn't out of line with other modeler products on the market, so I assume similar margins to their competition. You need to remember that things like developer salaries are also funded by the sales of the plugins and hardware. Plus their offices are not in a very cheap part of Helsinki.
 
One thing's for sure, though: NDSP won't get away with their absentee landlord routine for much longer. Not if the Helix team is as engaged as they were through the early years of the OG Helix. (Or right up to present, really.) I think Showcase is going to pull in a lot of customers once they start seeing the (many) practical applications, and if Line 6 continues to support with new features at their usual pace... it will be hard for anyone to ignore.

Absolutely. I think that whatever initial resistance there will be to Helix Stadium from some people ("it doesn't sound better than old Helix" "it doesn't feel as good" "Line 6 products don't sound good because I didn't like my Spider amp" etc) will be softened when people see the high rate of updates and quality of support we can pretty safely expect from Line 6—in contrast to the stagnation and delays we can also, I think, pretty safely expect from NDSP (or at least their QC team; lots of credit for the Nano Cortex team for their big updates).

It'll be hard for a QC user to not feel pulled if NDSP keeps to their current... standards, especially once captures drop. QC will still have the size advantage and, in some areas (not all!), the FX advantage, but I don't think either will hold forever either (and a competitively-priced Stadium Stomp that can play captures will do a number on the NC too)
 
Also, worth adding that if Stadium eventually has a Helix Native equivalent (I can't remember if this was confirmed for the future?), then that'll provide far better plugin integration than NDSP is even promising, which imo ends up being a huge plus for a lot of the younger, computer-centric guitarists that NDSP stuff is very popular with. If the implication of QC for a lot of people was that it could give them a portable version of the NDSP tones they already had on their computer, then a Stadium + Stadium Native combo would achieve the same in a much more complete way (just as Helix + Helix Native does now).

Granted, a lot of those plugins got popular because of how they were packaged and sold as (mostly) signature collections, which you can't ignore, but still.

ETA: at the same time, and to not get too off topic, I actually do want the QC to succeed though. While I know there is some bad blood with certain design things and behavior (understandably!), I think there is a good product in there almost despite (part of?) NDSP, and there are a lot of things about its approach that I really appreciate. I've almost gotten one a few times, and was extremely close to getting a NC, because there is just a sleekness to these products that makes them feel fun and inviting to use. I hope they can stay competitive somehow, get past the PCOM thing, and turn their issues around.
 
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