All of Creative's subsequent cards, other than the Sound Blaster PCI64/128 series, support SoundFonts. The card was sold with software for building custom SoundFonts. ![]() The AWE32 was the first sampler to support E-Mu's SoundFont standard, which allowed users to build custom sound sets using their own samples, the samples included in ROM, or both. It can also add effects to the output from the Yamaha OPL-3's FM synthesis. reverb and chorus) and environments on MIDI output, similar to the later EAX standard on Live! and newer cards. ![]() The effects processor generated various effects (i.e. These chips comprised a powerful and flexible sample-based synthesis system, based on E-mu's high-end sampler systems such as the E-mu Emulator III and E-mu Proteus. The synthesizer section consisted of the EMU8000 synthesizer and effects processor chip, 1 MiB EMU8011 sample ROM, and a variable amount of RAM (none on the SB32, 512 KiB on the AWE32 RAM was expandable to 28 MiB on both cards). The Sound Blaster AWE32 included two distinct audio sections one being the Creative digital audio section with their audio codec and optional CSP/ASP chip socket, and the second being the E-mu MIDI synthesizer section.
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