
What might an acid trip sound like through the Nemesis Delay? I think I hear what he's going for thereâs some pitch-shifting going on in this âDouble Helixâ delay engine, but it isnât exactly straightforward pitch shiftingâit jumps around and glitches out a bit. We took a deep dive into a couple of their presets: âAcid Tripâ for the Nemesis Delay and âNative Landsâ for the Ventris Dual Reverb.


You could be scrolling down the preset feed checking out each of Michael's presets, and if your pedal is connected, it would be jumping from ânormalâ sounds to âambientâ sounds to âcompletely out thereâ sounds, and back again. Michael Bevel (user name "msbevel") has been lighting the Neuro Community feed on fire with heaps of excellent tones for the Nemesis Delay and Ventris Reverb. The result is a very rhythmic and usable sound that conjures a wonderfully complex and hypnotic space. When two separate delays are set to different beat divisions, they can be synced by tapping the Tap Tempo switch. He has his Digital Delay set to 1/4 notes and his Analog Delay set to triplets. It also routes the effects in parallel, but this time Sam taps into the Collider's ability to simultaneously run two delays, each with its own beat division. The next preset is called " Sam Goffen Dual Delay Solo." (3:33 in the video). This is a great way to clean up your reverb/delay combo and achieve greater articulation. Here is the trick, by simply holding down the CONTROL INPUT button while moving the KNOBS toggle switch, the Collider automatically reroutes the effects to a parallel configuration, where both effect remains independent of the other and react only to the incoming dry signal.

By default the Collider runs its delay and reverb engines in series, delay cascading into reverb - just if you had separate delay and reverb pedals side-by-side on your board. First up is a preset called " Sam Goffen Delay and Shimmer" (2:20 in the video) - this supremely ambient effect takes advantage of the Collider's ability to run dual delay and reverb effects in parallel rather than series.

Sam Goffen)! Sam put together an outstanding collection of very useful sounds, but we're going to focus on a couple of our favorites. Here is an extraordinary demo for the Collider Delay+Reverb created by user SGoffen (a.k.a.
