But the fancy GUIs can eat up system resources pretty fast, but that can happen anywhere if you are using third-party plugins. And as with most software, no native compat i bility on Linux, but you can use an emulator if you want. As the Mac version has grown from a sloppy, Windows-crossover edition into a fully-fledged piece of standalone software, there have definitely been undeniable growing pains. It had a very fluid interface with very nice graphics and still does, even more so. FL Studio has worked on Windows very well for a long time. Note: This is for the most recent version, FL Studio Check here for full compatibility info. We are going to compare the main elements of both DAWs to see which is the best fit for you. That being said, this is going to be an unbiased comparison. But these two keep popping up: Ableton vs FL Studio. For me personally, I wish I had started on Live. But inI slowly transitioned to Ableton Live, much preferring the workflow.
I got it because everyone else was using it.