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01

Best Audio Interfaces Under $300

5 picks · Recording · Full reviews + videos
02

Top 5 Studio Headphones for Mixing

5 picks · Monitoring · Full reviews + videos
03

Essential Plugins Every Producer Needs

4 picks · Software · Full reviews + videos
04

Home Studio Setup on a Budget

4 picks · Studio · Full reviews + videos
05

Best MIDI Controllers for Beginners

4 picks · Controllers · Full reviews + videos
Recording

Best Audio Interfaces
Under $300

Your audio interface is the most important piece of hardware in any home studio. It determines your latency, your headroom, and the quality of everything you record. These five earn their spot on your desk — each under the $300 mark.

Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →
Interface

★ Top Pick

Focusrite Scarlett Solo (4th Gen)

Best for: Solo vocalists, singer-songwriters, podcasters

The Scarlett Solo is the most popular beginner interface on the planet for a reason. The 4th gen upgrade brings improved preamps, Air mode for a brighter high-end, and 24-bit/192kHz conversion — all at around $120. If you record vocals or one instrument at a time, this is the no-brainer buy.

Why it made the list

We picked the Scarlett Solo because it removes every excuse not to start recording. The 4th gen preamps are genuinely good — not "good for the price," just good. Air mode adds a subtle high-frequency lift that flatters vocals without sounding hyped. The included plugin bundle (Ableton Live Lite, Hitmaker Expansion) means you can go from unboxing to recording a finished track in the same afternoon. For anyone who records one source at a time — voice, guitar, synth — there's no reason to spend more.

Pros Best preamps in this price tier Bus-powered via USB-C Air mode adds clarity to vocals Huge community + plugin bundle
Cons Only 1 mic input — no band recording Plastic build feels a bit cheap
Interface

Best 2-Input Value

Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 (4th Gen)

Best for: Duo sessions, guitar + vocal recording, home bands

The step up from the Solo — two mic/line inputs, MIDI I/O on the 4th gen, and the same improved preamp quality. If you ever record two sources simultaneously (guitar + vocals, duo session, a stereo room mic), this is the right call. Around $180 and worth every cent.

Why it made the list

The 2i2 is the sweet spot in Focusrite's lineup. The moment you want to record guitar and vocals at the same time — or run a stereo mic pair on an acoustic instrument — the Solo hits a wall. The 2i2 gives you two independent preamps with separate gain control, and the 4th gen added MIDI I/O which means you can plug in a keyboard controller without needing a separate MIDI interface. That combo of flexibility and reliability at $180 is hard to beat. If there's any chance you'll outgrow a single input, start here and save yourself the upgrade cost later.

Pros 2 independent preamps + MIDI Halo ring monitoring is genuinely useful Rock solid driver support
Cons No hardware insert points Slightly pricier than SSL 2
Interface

Pro Sound on a Budget

SSL 2

Best for: Producers who want console-quality color on a budget

Solid State Logic making a $150 interface sounds ridiculous until you hear the preamps. The SSL 2 has two channels of SSL's Legacy 4K transformer-style preamps built in — punch a button and it adds that famous SSL character. Exceptional value from a legendary name.

Why it made the list

SSL consoles run $50K–$500K. The SSL 2 puts their preamp DNA into a $150 box — and it's not just marketing. The 4K Legacy mode genuinely adds harmonic character to recordings: a subtle mid-range punch and top-end shimmer that sounds expensive. We include it here because if you care about the tone of your recordings (not just the specs), the SSL 2 delivers something the Focusrite lineup doesn't: flavor. It's the right pick for anyone who values character over clinical transparency.

Pros 4K Legacy mode adds professional SSL color Better headphone amp than Scarlett Great software bundle
Cons No MIDI I/O Driver support less battle-tested
Interface

Best for Live Performers

MOTU M2

Best for: Live performers, latency-sensitive tracking, audiophile monitoring

MOTU makes interfaces that engineers respect. The M2 punches above its class with ultra-low latency, a surprisingly detailed metering display, and two pristine preamps. If you care about accurate monitoring and latency during live performance or tracking, this is your pick under $200.

Why it made the list

The MOTU M2 earns its place on the technical merits alone: the ESS Sabre DAC inside is the same chip found in audiophile DACs costing 5x more, and the measured round-trip latency is the lowest in this entire price tier. What that means practically is that when you're monitoring through plugins or playing a virtual instrument, the M2 responds faster than anything else here. The built-in LCD metering is also genuinely useful during recording — you can see levels at a glance without opening your DAW. It's the engineer's choice in a field of musician-friendly options.

Pros Lowest latency in this price range Built-in ESS Sabre DAC (audiophile grade) Polished hardware + display
Cons Slimmer software bundle Slightly pricier at ~$200
Interface

Power User Pick

Universal Audio Volt 276

Best for: Serious home recordists ready to invest in pro sound

UA brings the UREI 1176-style compression circuit into a $300 interface, which is genuinely insane. Hit the "Vintage" button and you get 1176-style compression on your input signal in real time. Overkill for pure beginners, but if you're ready to invest in sound quality, the Volt 276 is the ceiling of this category.

Why it made the list

The Volt 276 is our "if you can stretch the budget" recommendation. Universal Audio's integration of an analog 1176-style compressor circuit directly into the input path means you can print compression to your recordings in real time — something that normally requires a separate $500+ hardware compressor. For vocals especially, engaging the Vintage mode adds a polished, professional presence that's immediately audible. If you're past the "just getting started" phase and want your recordings to sound like records from day one, the Volt 276 justifies its ceiling price.

Pros Built-in 1176-style compressor is legit UA plugin ecosystem Beautiful hardware design
Cons $299 — at the very top of this guide Compressor is pre-ADC only
Monitoring

Top 5 Studio Headphones
for Mixing

Consumer headphones lie to you — they boost bass and cut the mids to make music sound exciting. Studio headphones tell you the truth. These five give you an accurate, honest picture of your mix so your tracks translate to every speaker.

Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →
Headphones

★ Top Pick

Sony MDR-7506

Best for: Mixing, tracking, broadcast, any engineer on a budget

The industry standard that never dies. MDR-7506s have been hanging around broadcast, film, and studio sessions since 1991 for a reason — they're ruthlessly accurate in the mids and highs, built like a tank, and cost $100. Every engineer has a pair. You should too.

Why it made the list

The MDR-7506 has survived every headphone trend since 1991 because it does one thing perfectly: tell you exactly what's in your mix. There's no bass hype, no treble sparkle designed to make music sound "exciting." What you hear is what's there. That honesty is why they've been the default pair hanging on the hook of every recording studio, broadcast booth, and film set for three decades. At $100, they cost less than dinner for two — and they'll outlast most of your gear. We put them first because if you can only afford one pair of studio headphones, this is the pair.

Pros Industry-proven flat response Extremely durable over years Replaceable ear cups + cable Folds flat for portability
Cons Slightly hyped at 10kHz — accounts for this Ear cups flatten over time
Headphones

Best Mid-Range

Audio-Technica ATH-M50x

Best for: Electronic/hip-hop producers, long session comfort

If you want more bass extension than the Sony and more comfort for long sessions, the M50x is the answer. It has a punchy, slightly colored response that still translates well for mixing. The detachable cable and three included cable types make it more practical than most in this range.

Why it made the list

The M50x is the headphone for producers who need to feel the bass while still getting an honest mix picture. Its low-end extension goes deeper than the Sony 7506, which makes it better suited for electronic music, hip-hop, and anything bass-heavy. The trade-off is a slightly colored response — you'll need to learn how the M50x translates to speakers (all headphones require this, but it's more pronounced here). We include it because for genres where sub-bass matters, mixing on headphones that roll off at 60Hz sets you up to fail. The M50x doesn't.

Pros Extended bass for electronic music Exceptional build quality Three detachable cables included
Cons Slightly hyped low end — learn your cans Clamps fairly hard
Headphones

Flattest Response

Beyerdynamic DT 770 Pro (80 Ohm)

Best for: Critical listening, marathon mix sessions, detail-oriented engineers

Beyer's closed-back workhorse. The 80 ohm version runs off most interfaces without a dedicated headphone amp, and the frequency response is extremely flat across the full range. Excellent for critical listening and very comfortable for marathon sessions with the velour ear pads.

Why it made the list

If accuracy is your priority above all else, the DT 770 Pro is the pick. Beyerdynamic's closed-back design offers exceptional isolation while maintaining a stereo image that's wider than you'd expect from closed cans. The velour ear pads are the most comfortable on this list — important when you're mixing for 6+ hours. The 80 ohm impedance version is key: it's low enough to run off any audio interface's headphone output without needing a separate amp, while still maintaining the detail and control of higher-impedance models. Made in Germany and fully repairable — when the ear pads flatten in 2 years, you replace them for $20, not the whole headphone.

Pros Exceptional imaging and stereo width Ultra comfortable velour pads Made in Germany, repairable
Cons Coiled cable is bulky in small studios Non-detachable cable
Headphones

Open-Back Option

Sennheiser HD 400 Pro

Best for: Mixing in a quiet room, spatial audio work, mastering

Open-back headphones give you a wider, more speaker-like soundstage that makes mixing stereo placement more natural. The HD 400 Pro is Sennheiser's entry into professional open-back territory — detachable cable, replaceable ear pads, and a reference-quality tuning. Use these when no one else is in the room.

Why it made the list

Open-back headphones are a fundamentally different mixing experience. Sound escapes through the open grille, which means you hear a wider, more natural soundstage — closer to mixing on speakers. The HD 400 Pro is our open-back pick because Sennheiser nailed the tuning: the mids are revealing without being harsh, and the low end is accurate without the roll-off common in open designs. The caveat is real: everyone around you will hear what you're playing, and your mic will pick up bleed during tracking. But for dedicated mixing sessions in a quiet space, the spatial advantage of open-backs makes panning and reverb decisions significantly easier to judge.

Pros Open-back staging improves mix decisions Velour pads, replaceable parts Exceptionally revealing mids
Cons Open-back = sound bleeds — not for tracking ~$200, pricier than closed-backs here
Headphones

Budget Pick

Samson SR850

Best for: Absolute beginners, tight budgets, first studio headphone

Under $50 and genuinely usable for mixing — the SR850 is a semi-open design with a wide soundstage and flat mid-range. It's not in the same league as the others on this list, but if you're just starting out and need a pair of studio headphones without spending rent money, this gets the job done.

Why it made the list

We almost didn't include a budget pick — the jump in quality from the SR850 to any of the four above is significant. But we kept it because the alternative for a beginner on a tight budget is mixing on AirPods or gaming headphones, and that's worse. The SR850's semi-open design gives it a surprisingly wide soundstage for the price, and the mid-range is honest enough to catch major mix problems. Think of it as training wheels: it'll get you through your first projects, teach you what flat response feels like, and make the upgrade to a DT 770 or MDR-7506 feel like a revelation.

Pros Under $50 — extremely accessible Semi-open for natural soundstage Better than any consumer HP at this price
Cons High-end rolls off early Fragile build over time
Software

Essential Plugins
Every Producer Needs

The DAW gives you a blank canvas. The right plugins give you a professional palette. These four cover the fundamentals — EQ, compression, reverb, and saturation — and they're all available as perpetual licenses or free tiers.

Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →
Plugin

★ Top Pick — EQ

FabFilter Pro-Q 3

Best for: Every producer and engineer, period

The gold standard for EQ plugins. Pro-Q 3 has dynamic EQ bands, spectrum analysis, mid-side processing, and a zero-latency natural phase mode all in one. The interface is the best in the industry — you'll use this on every single track. Worth every cent of the $179 perpetual license.

Why it made the list

Pro-Q 3 isn't just our top EQ pick — it's probably the single most-used plugin in professional music production. The reason is workflow: you can click anywhere on the spectrum to add a band, drag it visually, switch it to dynamic mode with a single click, and see exactly how it interacts with other tracks via the spectrum collision display. No other EQ does all of this in one interface. The $179 price tag is premium for a plugin, but consider that you'll put Pro-Q 3 on literally every track in every session. Per-use, it's the cheapest tool in your arsenal.

Pros Dynamic EQ bands + spectrum masking display Zero latency mode for tracking Unmatched workflow
Cons $179 — premium price Overkill for basic cuts/boosts
Plugin

Essential — Compression

Klanghelm MJUC Jr.

Best for: Mix bus glue, warming up digital recordings, beginners learning compression

Free. Excellent. A variable-mu tube compressor emulation that adds warmth and glue to any bus or stereo mix. MJUC Jr. is the intro version of their paid MJUC — and it sounds better than most paid compressors at 5x the price. Download it first, thank us later.

Why it made the list

Compression is the single hardest concept for new producers to grasp — and MJUC Jr. is the best teacher. With just three controls (input, output, and a character switch), it strips compression down to its musical essence: does the mix sound more "together" when it's on? The variable-mu circuit adds a gentle, warm compression that's almost impossible to abuse — turn it up and it just gets warmer. That's why it's a better starting point than surgical compressors that can easily destroy dynamics. The fact that it's completely free makes it a no-risk addition to any plugin folder.

Pros 100% free, no subscription Tube warmth / glue on mix bus Simple, musical controls
Cons Limited controls vs paid version Not for fast transient control
Plugin

Essential — Reverb

Valhalla Room

Best for: Vocals, synths, cinematic production, any genre needing space

$50. Sounds like a $1,000 plugin. Valhalla's algorithmic reverb algorithms are used on professional records from hip-hop to cinematic orchestral. Room, Hall, Chamber, and Plate modes all sound natural and musical. If you have one reverb, make it this one. The entire Valhalla lineup is worth exploring.

Why it made the list

Valhalla Room is the reverb that made indie developers credible against the big plugin companies. Sean Costello (the one-man team behind Valhalla DSP) writes algorithms that sound organic and musical in a way that most digital reverbs don't — the tails decay naturally, the early reflections feel like real rooms, and the high-end diffusion never gets harsh. At $50, it costs less than a month of most plugin subscriptions, and you own it forever. The variety of modes (Room, Chamber, Hall, Plate) means this single plugin covers 90% of reverb needs. We recommend starting here and only buying a convolution reverb when you specifically need it.

Pros Exceptional price-to-quality ratio Versatile across all genres CPU efficient
Cons No convolution (not "real" room modeling) UI is spartan
Plugin

Essential — Saturation

Softube Saturation Knob

Best for: Adding analog warmth to digital mixes, drums, synth buses

Free, one-knob, sounds incredible. Saturation Knob adds harmonic distortion that makes digital recordings feel warm, alive, and "finished." Throw it on drums, synths, and mix bus to add analog character. The Keep High and Keep Low modes are more sophisticated than the UI suggests.

Why it made the list

Digital recordings can sound sterile — technically perfect but lifeless. Saturation is the fastest fix. Softube's Saturation Knob adds harmonic overtones that mimic the way analog tape and tube circuits naturally "color" audio. The result: drums hit harder, synths feel thicker, and mixes sound more cohesive. The three modes (Keep High, Neutral, Keep Low) let you target the saturation to preserve either the top-end sparkle or the low-end weight. It's one of those "always on" plugins that subtly improves everything it touches. And it's free — which means there's no reason not to have it in your toolkit right now.

Pros Completely free forever Three tube character modes Works on everything
Cons Very limited control — single knob No parallel blend built in
Studio

Home Studio Setup
on a Budget

You don't need $10K to make professional recordings. You need the right pieces in the right order. These four items form the foundation of a capable home studio — from blank room to session-ready — for under $600 total.

Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →
Microphone

★ Best Budget Mic

Audio-Technica AT2020

Best for: First-time recording, vocals, acoustic instruments

The AT2020 is the bestselling large-diaphragm condenser mic at its price point for a reason. At $99, it sounds like a mic that costs three times as much — detailed, low-noise, and versatile enough for vocals, acoustic guitar, and room recording. Pair it with the Scarlett Solo and you have a complete recording chain.

Why it made the list

A home studio without a condenser mic is just a listening room. The AT2020 is where that changes. Audio-Technica's side-address cardioid design captures vocals and acoustic instruments with a clarity that punches well above its $99 price — the self-noise floor at 20 dB-A means you won't hear hiss in quiet passages, and the frequency response extends flat enough to capture the full character of whatever you point it at. Pair it with the Scarlett Solo from Article 01 and you have a complete, professional-quality recording chain for under $220 total. That's a studio you can make records with, not just demos.

Pros Detailed, extended frequency response Low self-noise (20 dB-A) Robust all-metal build
Cons Cardioid-only (no pattern switching) Needs a quiet room — reveals the room
Acoustic Treatment

Foundation Pick

Acoustic Foam Panel Pack (12-pack)

Best for: Any home studio, especially untreated bedrooms and spare rooms

Acoustic treatment is the biggest improvement you can make to a home studio — more than a better mic, more than better monitors. A 12-pack of 2" foam panels on your primary reflection points (behind you, side walls, above) will reduce flutter echo and comb filtering in your recordings. Under $40 and immediately audible.

Why it made the list

Most beginners upgrade their mic or interface when their recordings sound bad — but 80% of the time, the real problem is the room. Hard parallel walls create flutter echoes and comb filtering that no plugin can fix after the fact. Even basic 2" foam panels at the first reflection points (the spots on your side walls where sound bounces from your monitors to your ears) make a dramatic, immediately audible difference. This is the unglamorous purchase that separates recordings that sound "home-made" from ones that sound "home studio." Under $40 for 12 panels is the single best per-dollar upgrade in any bedroom setup.

Pros Biggest improvement per dollar in any studio Immediately audible difference Under $40 for basic coverage
Cons Foam absorbs highs, not low bass — panels supplement Adhesive can damage walls
Monitor Speakers

Best Budget Monitors

Yamaha HS5

Best for: Mixing, mastering reference, anyone upgrading from headphone-only workflow

Yamaha's HS series is famous for telling the harsh truth — they're deliberately flat and unforgiving. Mix on HS5s and if it sounds good, it'll sound good everywhere. The 5" woofer and 1" tweeter cover the critical mid-range accurately. At ~$220 each ($440/pair), they're the most important investment in your monitoring chain.

Why it made the list

The Yamaha HS5 is the modern successor to the NS-10, arguably the most important studio monitor in recording history. Like the NS-10, the HS5 philosophy is "if it sounds good on these, it sounds good everywhere" — they're intentionally unexciting and brutally honest. That's exactly what you want when making mix decisions. The room control switches on the back let you compensate for placement near walls or corners, which is critical in small home studios where ideal monitor placement isn't always possible. Yes, $440/pair is a real investment — but monitors are the one piece of gear that affects every single decision you make in a mix. This is not the place to cut corners.

Pros Ruthlessly flat — mixes translate everywhere Room control + HPF for placement flexibility Industry-standard reference
Cons ~$440/pair — significant investment Fatiguing for casual listening
Studio Stand

Essential Accessory

Rode PSA1 Boom Arm

Best for: Desk-based setups, vocal recording, podcasters, streamers

A desk-mount mic arm keeps your microphone at the right angle, absorbs vibration, and eliminates the flimsy stand that comes bundled with most beginner packs. The PSA1 is the studio standard — smooth articulation, heavy-duty construction, and clean cable routing. An $80 upgrade that lasts years.

Why it made the list

This is the upgrade most beginners don't think about — and the one that makes the biggest practical difference in daily use. A boom arm puts your microphone exactly where it needs to be (consistent distance, angle, and height) and decouples it from your desk vibrations (typing, mouse clicks, accidental bumps). The PSA1 specifically earns its reputation with studio-grade internal springs that hold any mic steady without drift, plus hidden cable routing that keeps your desk clean. At $80, it's a one-time buy that outlasts multiple microphones. Every podcaster, streamer, and home studio vocalist eventually realizes they need one — buy it now and skip the frustration.

Pros Built-in cable management Studio-grade articulation and clamping Fits 5/8" and 3/8" thread mics
Cons ~$80 — not dirt cheap Requires sturdy desk edge for clamp
Controllers

Best MIDI Controllers
for Beginners

Playing notes on a mouse is a workflow killer. A MIDI keyboard lets you play chords, program beats, and dial in melodies the way music was meant to be written — with your hands. These four are the best starting points at every budget level.

Read Full Article with Reviews & Videos →
MIDI Controller

★ Top Pick

Arturia MiniLab 3

Best for: All-around beginners, producers who want keys + pads + controls

25 keys, 8 backlit RGB pads, 18 assignable controls, and a software bundle that includes Analog Lab Intro with 500+ synth sounds. The MiniLab 3 at $99 is the most complete package in its tier — and Arturia's build quality is noticeably better than the plastic Akai alternatives. Bus-powered USB-C, plug-and-play.

Why it made the list

The MiniLab 3 wins our top spot because it gives you the most creative tools per dollar. You get velocity-sensitive keys for melodies, pressure-sensitive pads for drums and clips, and enough knobs and faders to control your DAW without touching the mouse. But the real differentiator is Analog Lab Intro — 500+ professionally designed synth, organ, and piano sounds that let you start making music immediately instead of hunting for free patches online. Arturia's build quality is a noticeable step above competitors at this price: the keys have a better feel, the knobs are smooth with good resistance, and the whole unit feels solid on your desk. If you're buying your first controller, start here.

Pros Excellent software bundle (Analog Lab) Better build quality than rivals Deep DAW control mapping USB-C, bus-powered
Cons Mini keys — not great for pianists 25 keys limits playing range
MIDI Controller

Best for Beat Makers

Akai MPD218

Best for: Hip-hop producers, finger drummers, sample-based workflow

If you're making beats rather than playing melodies, the MPD218 gives you 16 MPC-style velocity-sensitive pads, 6 assignable knobs, and 4 faders — no keys. Designed around the workflow of hip-hop and electronic production, it maps directly to drums, samples, and effects. Under $80 and immediately at home in any DAW.

Why it made the list

Not every producer needs keys. If your workflow is centered around chopping samples, programming drum patterns, and triggering clips — a keyboard controller is the wrong tool. The MPD218's 16 MPC-style pads are the same lineage as Akai's legendary MPC hardware that defined hip-hop production for decades. The velocity sensitivity is responsive enough for expressive finger drumming, and the 6 knobs + 4 faders give you real-time control over filters, effects, and mix parameters. At under $80, it's the cheapest entry point into a pad-based workflow — and for beat makers, it's more useful than any keyboard controller twice the price.

Pros MPC-style pad workflow 16 full-size velocity pads Knobs + faders for live control
Cons No keys — not for melodic playing Software bundle is slim
MIDI Controller

Best Full-Size Keys

Nektar Impact GX61

Best for: Pianists, keyboardists, anyone who needs full-range playing

If you want full-size, 61-key velocity-sensitive keys without spending $500, the Nektar GX61 is where to start. 61 full-size keys with aftertouch on some models, direct DAW integration, pitch and mod wheels, and USB bus power. The GX61 is built for the bedroom producer who wants a proper playing experience.

Why it made the list

Mini keys are fine for programming, but if you actually play piano or keys, 25 mini keys feels like typing on a phone keyboard. The GX61 solves this with 61 full-size, velocity-sensitive keys that let you play two-handed parts, practice technique, and perform naturally. The Nektar DAW integration is genuinely smart — it auto-maps transport controls, mixer faders, and plugin parameters for Ableton, Logic, Cubase, and most other DAWs without manual MIDI mapping. At around $100, it's remarkably affordable for a full-size controller. The trade-off is no pads or encoders — this is purely a keyboard, and it's the best budget one available for producers who prioritize playing over production control.

Pros Full-size 61 keys — proper playing range Direct DAW integration (Ableton, Logic, etc.) Bus-powered, no power adapter
Cons No pads or encoders Key action is light vs premium boards
MIDI Controller

All-in-One Option

Akai MPK Mini MK3

Best for: Portable production, laptop setups, travel musicians

The MPK Mini MK3 packs 25 mini keys, 8 MPC pads, 8 assignable knobs, and a joystick controller into an ultra-portable $100 package. It's the most popular starter controller in the world — and for good reason. Use it at home, bring it to the studio, throw it in a bag. The MK3 went full-size with the OLED screen and improved build.

Why it made the list

The MPK Mini MK3 is the Swiss Army knife of MIDI controllers. Where the MiniLab 3 edges it out on build quality and software bundle, the MPK Mini counters with portability and versatility — it's physically smaller, lighter, and the included MPC Beats software is a capable DAW in its own right. The 8 MPC pads are excellent for drum programming, and the 8 assignable knobs give you hands-on control without reaching for the mouse. If your setup moves between locations (home studio, dorm room, coffee shop, tour bus), the MPK Mini fits in any backpack and works with any DAW on any OS. It's the world's bestselling controller for a reason — it does everything reasonably well in an impossibly compact form factor.

Pros Keys + pads + knobs all in one compact unit Ultra-portable, bus-powered Good software bundle (MPC Beats)
Cons Mini keys aren't great for long sessions Joystick instead of separate wheels