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Also, since you'll be using Windows XP you have to install WDM drivers - and the issues I mentioned before with the Santa Cruz (missing sounds, inconsistent framerates) could show up without warning in GOG games. I would still go with the SB Live!, it's just better overall for gaming the Santa Cruz does have a soft synth (DLS based) but it pales in comparison with the soundfonts SB Live! can use. I'm talking just the card-no wavetable add-on. Would there be any difference between the Santa Cruz and Live! for GOG games that offer General MIDI? I know DOS Box can support General MIDI when their DOS games offer that as an option.
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I was wondering which would be a better choice in a Windows XP gaming machine-the Santa Cruz or the SBLive! This PC will mostly be for playing GOG games. Reply 8 of 17, by Ja圜eeBee64Īwesome, that was going to be my next question. This does not apply to DOSBox which does its own FM synthesis and uses Windows MIDI output. These cards are also no good for FM synthesis.
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A software synthesizer is used and it stinks. In DOS however you do not use the hardware synth and can not use soundfonts.
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Live, Audigy and XFi are more capable MIDI cards than the competition, because of soundfont support and full featured hardware synthesizer(s). I think you could use Alchemy Universal and have software Alchemy however. This is because Live does not have OpenAL support. Alchemy doesn't support it on a hardware level though so no DS3D/EAX. Live can work on Vista and later but not with more than 2GB RAM because of some limitation with the driver. If you want to play games, these are my suggestions. But if you want EAX to work properly you should go Creative. It's quirky but can sound nice because Sensaura is a solid 3D audio solution. For gaming I would frankly go with an SB Live! or Aureal Vortex, they're better suited than the Santa Cruz. Would I use it again? Probably, if I want to build a retro PC with a PCI only board for music playback that's where it excels at. Music playback is excellent with either digital audio (MP3, FLAC), MIDI, or tracker (MOD, S3M, XM, IT) files very low noise floor and full range with either good speakers or headphones. Here it is with my TB Cancun FX MIDI DB ?. Still, it's one of the few PCI cards with a wavetable header, and it does work very well in Windows. In Windows games it has issues with either VXD (sound delays, skipping, stuttering) or WDM (missing samples, inconsistent volume/framerates) drivers, most likely buffering/resampling problems.
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Not a bad sound card overall, I would say it's more for music listening than gaming as gerwin said DOS sound (via TSR) is pretty basic - no hardware MIDI or CD audio, no mixer utility, OP元 emulation is not very good, DOS games have a tendency to crash/freeze unexpectedly. I have a Santa Cruz, and used it at various times in PCs with Windows 98 SE (Pentium 3) and Windows 2000 (Pentium 4) for quite some time. I thought it was XP, but it was Vista as you say. I knew support and drivers ended at a major OS break. You're absolutely right about the Live! It's my memory that failed me. I was just hoping someone on here had some real-world experience with the card that might be able to share some details and experiences that one doesn't find on Wikipedia or in reviews by random Joes. I've already read all I could find on the internet about it. I do know it was based off of a Crystal chip: No, the Turtle Beach Santa Cruz did not use a Creative Labs chip. I do know there were some OEM Live!s which were more troublesome to get the right driver, but I don't know anything about your particular card, except that I'm not sure yours is a SB or that it even uses a Creative Labs chip? SB Live! did have drivers for XP I thought? I thought it was Vista that didn't support Live! anymore (not sure about this though, maybe it was just discontinued support for EAX or something?).