
I find it is easier to hear how I sound if I do a separate recording in Audacity and play it back. Moving too far up will actually make an echo effect. Note that moving too far left will make your voice sound "hollow" and likely harder to understand. While the setting you see on in the image here may work very well for Scotch, your voice and room is going to be a little different. It can simulate a little bit of depth to your voice that may be lacking if your room has a lot of sound absorbing materials. As the dot moves up it adds a bit of echo. Conversely, you can make your more treble heavy by moving to the right.

First, Intellipan: This simple tool controls how bass-heavy your voice is by sliding the dot to the left. Scotch actually only uses two settings, though we'll talk about some others as well. For the sake of simplicity in this setup select VB-Audio Virtual Cable in slot A1.įinally, make sure whatever you're using your mic for has the new Virtual Audio Cable selected as its device. In almost every scenario you want your output to be a virtual cable. Select WDM: and whatever your mic is. You can rename this field from Hardware Input 1 to whatever you want by right-clicking it. First, in the first Hardware Input you need your microphone. When you first install VMB you're going to need to select a few items for the basic use. Also you'll need to install Virtual Cable, which is by the same company (and also free). We'll save the tutorial for mixing for another day and focus solely on voice modification. The first thing you'll need is Voice Meeter Banana (VMB), it's free! Not only can we use it for real time voice processing, but VMB also acts as a mixer, letting you have multiple inputs and multiple outputs and mix between them freely. Scotch has his set to 63 Volume with AGC on.Įxplore ModMic Discover how ModMic improves your audio! One last thing before we dive into the tips and tricks though: Your windows settings still matter.


Scotch, as he'll be called from here on out uses only Voicemeeter and the ModMic Wireless to achieve this sound. All we can do is make you sound more SCOTCHBOX-like. Yep, the guy is a voice actor! The source, in this case your voice, does make an impact! So, once again, audio tools are not magic. The first thing you'll notice when you watch that video is how great he sounds. Warning: VR Chat is a weird and strange world. With that in mind, I snagged a conversation with our new good friend and voice actor, SCOTCHBOX, he modified his already great sounding ModMic Wireless to sound even silkier. First, let's be clear about one thing: You can modify how a microphone sounds, but you can't make a bad mic sound good any more than you can make a blurry image clear by clicking "enhance" over and over again (*Ahem* CSI).
