cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
- I really see the appeal for a live player only situation.
I think that is the biggest key to understanding this board. They didn't design it for deep synthesis, they designed it for bread and butter on stage. Frankly most keyboard players I have talked to don't know how to build a synth patch from scratch, no matter how well they can play said patch. The wave takes many shortcuts to allow people to get into the ballpark quickly. That idea works for some and not for others, but if you need to build a sound for a live performance on short notice, it's quite simple once you understand the interface. And being able to split and layer up to 4 sounds is again a very helpful feature for live players.
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
- The effects are very underwhelming, on a 1 to 1 comparison to the A1, it seems they dont shine as much. I was expecting exactly the OPPOSITE.
Never owned an A1, but isn't the effect selection larger on the Wave? Larger doesn't necessarily mean better quality of course. I tend to run my keyboards through pedals anyway to account for effects I am picky about or that cannot otherwise be easily produced directly. For example delays and reverbs from pedals can be so much nicer sounding.
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
- Sample memory for 2026 is ghastly.
True, but the good news is 1 GB in Clavia's terms is not 1 GB. I have converted 1.34GB so far and the nsmp3 files account for only 383MB. The sample memory should have absolutely been at least doubled -- if this is the flagship synth, and other flagship boards have 2GB for the piano section it would have been a no brainer. Obviously a board with much more is preferable but I am thinking realistically about what Nord does with other products, asking for 10GB is not going to happen sadly... Also the original Wave, if I remember correctly, had less than 200MB!
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
- No support anymore from clavia for samples (they already moved on to another sample version). Which feels VERY horrendous, they dont even bothered publishing new samples in both smp4 and smp3 formats..
Where are you seeing samples only available in nsmp4? The only exceptions I can think of are a few factory wind/brass sounds that use features exclusive to nsmp4. Otherwise everything they've released is available, I think even in original nsmp. What are you looking for?
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
FM is basically a one trick pony in the Wave 2. Wave 1, A1 and Lead 3 had much better implementations of it.
Agree -- would love to have more FM possibilities here.
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
- The fact that the sounds stop playing when changing presets is terrible (even the Lead 3 has that!!!)
True, it seems odd that this was not included in the design when other boards Nord had released previously were able to do it.
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
Overall, I understand why the preivious owner didnt bother to remove the plastic from the display. The same as I did. Sold it and I am pretty sure I won't misst it at all. Clavia absolutely lost their passion in the synth business and hopefully the fact that Wave 2's are barely seen anywhere and are sold at very low prices in the used market makes them understand they dropped the ball on this one. I don't recommend spending 3000 USD on this abandoned synth not even to my worst enemy. Plenty more to choose from.
That's a major plus though, you can get these used for a huge discount compared to other Nords, in virtually new condition. So if it's a board you want, there's no excuse to pay $3200 or whatever the current price is. At one point Clavia had a sale on these for $2000 new which, as they never do this, probably explains a lot.
cambe wrote: 27 Jan 2026, 15:10
Are there samplers like the wave in the market? Actually not very many and not in the same "immediate" format.
Yep...this is a big selling point, however. I have a Sequential Prophet X, which I have used as my main gigging keyboard despite it not really being advertised as a ROMpler. I deleted the 150GB of factory sounds and replaced them with my own library I converted from various software and hardware. It has its own strengths, and is a far deeper synth, but it's had so many issues in the 2.5 years that I've owned it and it also takes forever to fully load large multisamples (sometimes 20-30 seconds!) As fun as that board is, I recently got a great deal on a Wave 2 and will probably be selling the PX, replacing it with a double Nord stack (S4 compact, W2 on top.) There are features I'll miss from the Prophet, no doubt...but the reliability issues, the long patch load times, the keyboard's velocity response being uneven, and so on...Even the VA oscillators don't sound as good as the Nord's let alone actual analog synths though you can give them a lot of nice character with the mod matrix. And the effects on that one make the Wave's sound top tier!
But I realized as a live keyboard player I don't use half of the sounds I loaded nor do I need half of the features the PX has. I spent more time programming than playing and then I didn't use a lot of what I programmed for anything. This is where the simple boards like the Nords fit in, at the end of the day. I'd love to see them make a deeper synth again, but I don't think it's a priority for them.