![]() Let’s see if I can get to the bottom of what’s great about this eager and strange piece of music production software. However, I have a feeling in my water that cool stuff is going on in here and I will endeavour to put my prejudice aside and give FL Studio 12 a fair shake. So it is from a position of poorly disguised cynicism that I find myself looking once again upon the immense greyness of the latest version of Fruity Loops. I was encouraged to check out version 11 because it had some multi-touch elements, but I soon discovered they were pretty basic and I had never liked the look of the program which appeared to have remained largely unchanged for a decade and so being a snobby knob I gave it less than a few minutes of my time. I did hear of people using it, being creative with it but even when it evolved into FL Studio I didn’t take it particularly seriously. I have looked down my nose, ignored, patronised and generally dismissed Fruity Loops as a fun little loop making program for its entire existence. If you just want the video version then you’ll find it on our YouTube channel here: So here is the unedited and probably typo ridden full review that goes into far more detail than the video ever could. Besides when I make the videos I have to cut a lot out in order to keep the length under control. Normally I post the written version on here just to highlight the video, but I thought I should do better and make the written version more complete with proper screen shots and the like. This is a no holds barred deep dive into FL Studio 12 from the point of view of the desktop and the Surface Pro 3.
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