![]() But we’ll ALWAYS eventually get the Cubase updates. There is a lag, yes, and I think it’s been exacerbated by the pandemic, but we’ll get those features soon, plus some new ones that won’t show up in Cubase for while, if ever. But where Cubase typically lags behind (and also never catches up) is with specific post production features, but even down to some very common features like with the video engine and DOP, for example, where Nuendo has been a step or two ahead, depending on version.Īnyway, the two apps are separate products that in theory were supposed to be converging on their dev timelines, but I’ve never heard them say it would be in perfect lock step. ![]() When Nuendo 10 was released, they had promised that updates would be more closely linked together with Cubase, but then Coronavirus happened and I’m sure Steinberg’s normal dev cycle was disrupted.īut in any case, it isn’t accurate that only “Cubase gets the new features first” – more accurately, it’s “Cubase gets some features first that will definitely make it into Nuendo eventually, and at other times Nuendo gets some features first that Cubase will never get.” Where Nuendo lags behind Cubase is usually in the composition/MIDI/music side of the balance, so it may seem that Nuendo lags behind a lot if that’s where you spend most of your time. I get the frustration, and I’m sure that the pandemic has impacted Steinberg’s release schedule. ![]() Some of us here feel that it’s unfair that we pay more for Nuendo, and it’s supposed to be the flagship of Steinberg,
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