![]() ![]() ![]() The main interface of Deckadance 2.5 looks like a cross between Traktor Pro 2 and Virtual DJ 8 – you’ve got two decks on the upper half of the screen (extendable to four), a section in the middle that can be swapped (mixer, effects, sampler, scratch mode / vertical waveforms, VST plugins, and Grossbeat mode), and a Browser section for the lower half. I hooked up my Hercules Universal DJ (one of the newer supported controllers), and got to work. I downloaded the Deckadance DVS installer from its website – it comes as a fully-working version of the software with a six second “mute” that kicks in once in a while until you’ve registered it.Īt the time of this writing there are only a handful of controllers that come natively mapped to it, but with Stanton breathing new life to it that could change in the near future. There are two versions of Deckadance – Standard and DVS which lets you use it with third-party timecode CDs and vinyl like Mixvibes, Torq, Ms Pinky, and Serato Scratch Live. In this review we take a look at Deckadance 2.5, which is the first Deckadance version to be released after it was acquired by Stanton DJ from Image-Line. It brought innovations like hosting third-party VST plugins (EQs, compressors) as well as the ability to be inserted as a plugin itself in another DAW. ![]() Full Deckadance 2.5 Reviewĭeckadance is one of those DJ apps that’s been around for a while – it started almost 10 years ago under developer Image-Line, maker of the popular Fruity Loops / FL Studio digital audio workstation. First Impressions / Setting up In this review we take a look at Deckadance 2.5, the first version of the long-running DJ software that’s now under the Stanton DJ brand. ![]()
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