Sinc Vereor

Sinc Vereor

by Noise Engineering
Best for Electronic and experimental producers who want a lightweight yet deep synthesizer for wavemorphing textures, aggressive wavefolded leads, self-similar noise percussion, and thick unison pads — all from a single Tone control
Free alternative to
Arturia Pigments 7 View on Plugin Boutique
Arturia Pigments 7
Xfer Serum 2 View on ADSR
Xfer Serum 2

Key Features

  • Wavemorphing Tone control that sweeps between saw, triangle, square, and sine waveforms with continuous wavefolding for complex harmonic textures
  • Three oscillator modes: Plain for core wavemorphing, Super for six-voice unison thickness, and Noise for self-similar pitched noise textures
  • Variable-slope ADSR envelope with analog-inspired multimode filter (lowpass, bandpass, highpass) and filter mix, resonance, and pitch tracking
  • Deep modulation with four LFO types, step sequencer, four assignable macros, full MPE support, and polyphonic aftertouch
  • Over 1,000 factory presets with randomization and nudge controls for instant sound discovery
  • Vintage-inspired chorus in two intensity stages for added stereo width and movement
  • Lightweight CPU footprint in a resizable interface with Scala tuning file support and MIDI learn on every parameter

Description

Sinc Vereor by Noise Engineering is a wavemorphing subtractive synthesizer loosely based on their acclaimed Sinc Iter Eurorack module. A single Tone control sweeps between saw, triangle, square, and sine waveforms while simultaneously applying wavefolding for harmonic complexity that goes well beyond traditional oscillator shapes.

Three oscillator modes define the sonic range. Plain mode delivers the core wavemorphing/wavefolding engine, Super mode stacks six phase-offset oscillators for thick unison textures, and Noise mode generates self-similar pitched noise for percussion and atmospheric effects.

The dynamics section pairs a variable-slope ADSR envelope with an analog-inspired multimode filter offering lowpass, bandpass, and highpass responses. Filter mix, cutoff, resonance, envelope amount, and pitch tracking controls give detailed tonal shaping without menu-diving.

A deep modulation system includes four LFO types, four assignable macros, full MPE support with polyphonic aftertouch, and MIDI learn on every parameter. The vintage-inspired chorus adds stereo width in two intensity stages.

Noise Engineering built its reputation on Eurorack hardware used by electronic and experimental producers worldwide. Sinc Vereor ships with over 1,000 presets and a randomization engine that generates usable patches in a single click.

Video Preview

Sinc Vereor video preview
Sinc Vereor video preview

Frequently Asked Questions

What is wavemorphing synthesis and how does Sinc Vereor use it?

Wavemorphing blends between different waveform shapes continuously rather than switching between them. Sinc Vereor's Tone control smoothly transitions from saw through triangle, square, and sine while simultaneously applying wavefolding, creating timbres that sit between familiar analog shapes and complex harmonic textures.

Is Sinc Vereor based on real Eurorack hardware?

Yes. Sinc Vereor is loosely based on the Sinc Iter, a digital VCO Eurorack module by Noise Engineering. The plugin adapts the module's wavemorphing and wavefolding synthesis into a full instrument with added features like the modulation system, presets, and chorus effect.

Does Sinc Vereor support MPE controllers?

Yes. Sinc Vereor has full MPE support including polyphonic aftertouch, slide, and per-note modulation. The pitch bend range is configurable up to 48 semitones. This makes it well suited for expressive controllers like the Roli Seaboard or Sensel Morph.

How do the three oscillator modes in Sinc Vereor differ?

Plain mode provides the core wavemorphing/wavefolding oscillator. Super mode adds six phase-offset copies of the oscillator for thick unison and chorus-like textures. Noise mode replaces the oscillator with an adjustable-bandwidth self-similar noise source for percussion, risers, and atmospheric effects.