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Sugar Bytes DrumComputer [WiN-MAC]

The logo for the Sugar Bytes Drumcomputer plugin, which is a stylized image of a vintage computer monitor. The screen displays two floating diamond shapes, one orange and one green, and a row of eight colorful squares are on the base below the screen.

I booted DrumComputer to “just sketch a groove,” then looked up and two hours were gone. It’s the rare drum instrument where randomize buttons don’t wreck your idea—they steer it. You get happy accidents that still feel intentional, because the synthesis engines and the sequencer are musically biased rather than purely chaotic. It’s like rolling dice with guardrails.

Quick Facts

Hands-On — the bits that changed my workflow

Three engines per drum that actually matter
Each voice stacks a resonator (think tuned body/impact), a wavetable/analog lane for overtone shape, and a resynth/sampler lane where you can bring your own material. The payoff isn’t just “more layers”—it’s being able to sculpt punch (resonator), character (wavetable), and texture (resynth) independently before they hit the shared filter/drive/FX. Kicks stop fighting hats; claps stop smearing with snares.

Sequencer = ideas on rails
Probability that nudges, not nukes; rolls that feel played; per-step delay offsets for micro-groove; and humanize that adds drift without derailing tight pop quantize. The auto-fill system is the cheat code for “section lifts” without opening the piano roll. I mapped patterns and mutes to keys and started performing arrangements live.

Randomizers you’ll actually use
The smart random buttons operate at engine and pattern levels, so you can lock a kick/snare you love and re-spin just hats and perc—or re-deal the whole kit but keep the groove. It’s the difference between “cool noise” and “usable track parts.”

Export + routing without drama
Drag-drop MIDI to your DAW when you want to keep the groove but swap the sound source; or route multi-outs to process each drum with your favorite channel chains. (DAW setup differs—Bitwig/Logic/Live all fine here; some forum threads show edge-case mapping quirks, but day-to-day it’s solid.)

At-a-Glance

Real-World Checks

Where it shines — and what to watch

Shines at:

Watch for:

Quick Answers

Q: Can I use my own samples?
A: Yes—import in the resynth/sampler lane inside each engine.

Q: Does it export MIDI?
A: Yep, drag-drop MIDI right from the sequencer to your DAW.

Q: iPad or desktop—big differences?
A: Core feature set is intact on iPad; desktop wins for routing/multi-out and DAW integration.

Bottom Line

DrumComputer doesn’t try to be every drum plugin; it tries to be the synthetic drum instrument you reach for when you want character and control without losing speed. The three-engine voices give you mix-ready focus, the sequencer keeps ideas moving, and the randomizers spark variations that sound intentional. If you write electronic music (or anything that benefits from bespoke percussion), this belongs in your first-call folder.

Sugar Bytes DrumComputer

DrumComputer is an 8-voice drum synth workstation that layers Resonator + Wavetable/Analog + Resynth/Sampler per voice, with a deep sequencer (probability, rolls, step delay, humanize) and intelligent randomizers. Great for synthetic kits that stay musical, not chaotic.

Price: 129

Price Currency: USD

Operating System: Windows 7, macOS 10.13

Application Category: Multimedia

Editor's Rating:
4.6
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