Putting these visuals front and centre and allowing you to resize the whole GUI helps show exactly what each processor is doing, which can ultimately lead to you making more confident and refined edits. You also get the Visual Mixer, Relay and Tonal Balance Control plug-ins, plus the built-in Limiter, the improved Masking Meter, and the AI Mix Assistant that comprises of the previously available Track Enhance function and the fancy new Balance feature.Īside from these main components, certain elements of the GUI have had a tasty upgrade, including silky smooth visual feedback that lets you adjust things like thresholds on top of large waveforms and spectrums. So what’s in the Advanced version? Well, you get the seven main processors built in, which includes the Equalizer, 2 Compressors, Gate, Transient Shaper, Exciter, and new Sculptor modules plus individual plug-in versions for each.
#Izotope neutron vs neutron advanced upgrade#
We’ll be looking at the full-fat Neutron 3 Advanced, although it’s worth noting that there are cut-down versions, various upgrade prices and several software bundle options available, with more details on the iZotope website. One of these is the unique new Mix Balance feature that can automatically set the volumes of your tracks to create an initial mix – and you can read about our experiences testing it below. Now we are at version 3, with a similar-looking product on the surface, but look a little deeper and you’ll see that it contains a handful of notable additions and refinements, making this the best version of Neutron yet. It doesn’t feel all that long ago that we reviewed Neutron 2 (alongside Ozone 8), which included a solid suite of mixing processors and useful tools alongside several new features and improvements to iZotope’s AI Mix Assistant.