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SoundGym
Apr 24, 12:07 in SoundGym Official
Congrats @Tom Lawrenson for winning the Diamond Ears Award!
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Colin Aiken
Apr 25, 04:33
Legendary work!
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Henry Do
Apr 25, 06:19
Congrats Tom! Keep rocking
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Helmut Mair
Apr 25, 06:36
congratulations!
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SoundGym
Apr 24, 16:37 in SoundGym Official
Congrats @NGUYEN LE ANH TIEN for winning the Diamond Ears Award!
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Paul Machowsky
Apr 24, 20:40
Awesome work Nguyen!!
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Marcus Woodworth
Apr 24, 20:52
Got any advice?
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Colin Aiken
Apr 25, 04:33
Outstanding achievement!
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Sara Hernández
Apr 24, 22:34 in SoundGym Cafe
Hola, quisiera saber que técnica usan en peak master, no logro reconocer que frecuencia ha sido potenciada
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Colin Aiken
Apr 25, 04:32
repetition
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SoundGym
Apr 24, 19:54 in SoundGym Official
Congrats @Himalay Singh for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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DJ Astrofreq
Apr 24, 20:00
Congrats Himalay!!
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Lio LM
Apr 25, 00:06
Congrats Himalay! 🌞🌞🌞
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Colin Aiken
Apr 25, 04:31
Superb work!
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Lukas Veleminsky
Apr 24, 13:25 in SoundGym Cafe
Hello guys, I am once again asking for help, this time with DB King :D

With all of the other games, I feel like, even if I'm not beating my best results, I am improving. I can recognize differences in the comp/distortion games easier, even if I don't always choose the right answers. I have a clearer idea of the frequency spectrum and more reliable results, even if I don't pass new levels. Even the delay game seems learnable to me.

But I just don't understand how to judge the dB differences. I've gotten to lvl 17 (or 18 maybe) and I feel like there has been zero improvement, sometimes I just guess it right, sometimes I don't. Of course, there are some things I feel like I've memorized (like, a difference between, let's say, a 10-18 dB range vs a 5-8 dB range). But I can't imagine ever reliably guessing stuff like 2 vs 2.5 dB. Or even at the lower differences something like 16 vs 20 dB. Feels different with each type of sound.

Do you have any tips on improving at this?
Thanks, have a great day!
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jeremy Bitner
Apr 24, 20:53
Each round I use the volume knob on my interface to try and set it to a comfortable listening level. I look at the bypass and make sure I'm on the loudest side. Then I do my best to recreate this listening level. Then, After I do my best to recreate that listening level, I hit the button, and the level goes down. I always want it going down. because if i set the level on the quiet side it just gets really loud. Once you start doing this over time you can get a better gauge on it. -5, -10, and -20 are the most important levels to concentrate on. -10 is pretty quite. -20 is Very quite heading towards silence. Once you kinda get a feeling for these you have a basis to judge things in between (-6,-12 for example) It will still take some time. But, by doing this its helped me out a lot. Rock on!
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Marcus Woodworth
Apr 24, 20:58
The mistake you're making is trying to memorize it. You may refer to my post: http://www.soundgym.co/space/talk?id=NASZ2448MAR&t=L8BCA0YUD88
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Anthony Zambonini
Apr 24, 21:54
I agree with Marcus. You can't learn this by rote - That's a rational intellective technique - OK for learning history or geography. What you're doing here is developing an intuitive skill. The only way you can do that is by osmosis - Absorbing it by repeating and repeating and repeating. Remember also that the more pain you feel because you're making no progress, and the longer you feel it, the better it is. it means your subconscious mind is constructing a more sophisticated paradigm to deal with the task. Never give up, and someday soon you will discover you are starting to take off.
Congrats @Paul Machowsky for winning the Golden Ears Award!
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Steve Rinaldi
Apr 24, 17:18
Congratulations, Paul! On to your Diamond Ears!
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DJ Astrofreq
Apr 24, 20:00
Well done, Paul!
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Paul Machowsky
Apr 24, 20:39
Thank you everyone! I really appreciate the kudos!!

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