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There's definitely benefit in singling out good voicebanks for beginners - as someone on a thread put it when I was looking for my first voicebank, "If a beginner uses a hard voicebank and can't make it sound good, they'll get demoralized."
But I think that's about where it stops. It's good to say "Hey, X Y and Z are super easy to use, A B and C take more work", but to try and insist one is better than another or dissuade newcomers from vocals they like due to their difficulty level - THAT'S unfair for sure.
I'd even argue that harder voicebanks are good to start with; if you can learn to handle them, you can learn to handle just about anything.
Yeah, I just see a couple of people put down a lot of vocals (especially with English voicebanks) because of it. If it were me I'd just say "Go with whoever if you're willing to put in the effort"
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But I think that's about where it stops. It's good to say "Hey, X Y and Z are super easy to use, A B and C take more work", but to try and insist one is better than another or dissuade newcomers from vocals they like due to their difficulty level - THAT'S unfair for sure.
I'd even argue that harder voicebanks are good to start with; if you can learn to handle them, you can learn to handle just about anything.