

We're all understanding here, but please try to use common sense and help us out by following these rules. Official For Honor Bug Reporter Related Subreddits Competitive For Honorįor Honor Rants UPCOMING TOURNAMENTS Community ResourcesįH Newcomers Guide: General Tips and Info For Honor InfoHub WebsiteĮxecution Information Subreddit filters Show All Only News Hide Humor/Memes Announcement PSA Videos Discussion Humor Fluff Bugs/Glitches Suggestions Questions Creations Rules The Centurion, meanwhile, is just so practical, the sort of drive you might always have on or engage when you really want to make your tube amp hot under the collar.Available on PC, Xbox One/Series X and PlayStation 4/5 Subreddit Discord Official Links MusicRadar verdict: With its selectable clipping options and no-fuss control set, the Revolution could well top your shopping list when looking for TS-style drive with more to it.

Stack it with some other dirt pedals on your ‘board you’ve got options aplenty for cooking up a harmonically rich tone that’s hard to quit. Roll it hard as a clean boost and your tube amp can really sing, with the option of a little high-end sparkle from the tone control should you need it.Īt no setting does it saturate your sound with gain but adding that extra bit of volume and breakup can really get the best out of your setup. Okay, it is hard to make pragmatism sexy, but when you consider the many uses you will find for the Centurion it suddenly makes sense.Įven just as the most subtle of boosts, the Centurion adds some musical heat to your signal. The Klon Centaur might inspire a lot of cork-sniffing eccentricity and fiscal largesse among overdrive aficionados but when you get past the hype, it's quite possible that its popularity can be understood in terms of its practicality. The Klon is beyond the means of most of us, but if you're looking for that type of touch-sensitive, transparent overdrive and boost that keeps your core sound intact, the Soul Food delivers it. Smaller, more affordable, more available and just as musical as Paul Cochrane's originals, Timmy remains one of the first names that come to mind when you think of transparent overdrive. The op-amp setting is a little more open, a little more raucous, while the LED diodes deliver a more compressed feel, with oodles of sustain to play with, and a little more teeth in the crunch than the other settings. With the silicon diodes selected, you’ve got a nice, tight drive, with a well-tamed low end.

In a blind taste test, it’d pass muster for TS-style drive. At heart, and across all three of its clipping options, it remains remarkably touch-sensitive, and exactly the sort of drive that blues-rock players or those who like to jockey their volume control while playing will really appreciate. The Revolution performs that neat trick of being versatile and tweakable without being complicated. Flattley Revolution and Silver Centurion: Performance and verdict The mids, meanwhile, pass through a soft-clipping circuit “to give them an amplitude-dependent boost to the harmonics.” Here, the gain control affects not only the amount of gain and volume but the mids sensitivity and width. Once more, we have Gain, Volume and Treble, with the Centurion keeping the clever stuff under the hood, where your signal is split into several frequency bands and processed separately.įlattley says bass frequencies pass through untouched, as do treble frequencies – though you can boost the latter by turning the tone knob clockwise.

Control-wise, it could not be much more simple.
