Korg Legacy Collection (2004) Launched in 2004, the initial
Korg Legacy Collection featured emulations of the
MS-20,
Polysix, and
Wavestation, along with a combination module named Legacy Cell, which integrates the MS20 and Polysix. The MS-20 plugin upgrades the original's monophonic capabilities to 32-voice polyphony, uses virtual patch cables and features MIDI-controllable knobs. The Polysix plug upgrades the original 6-voice polyphony to 32 voices, with added functionalities like
MIDI clock synchronization for the
LFO and arpeggiator. The
Wavestation plugin offers sample rates from 44.1 kHz to 96 kHz, enhancing the original's 32 kHz rate, and comes with 550 presets. The original Legacy Collection also included MS-20iC, a USB controller designed for the MS-20 software that mirrors the appearance of the original MS-20, providing MIDI control and simulated patch cable manipulation. Korg introduced the
Legacy Collection Digital Edition in 2006, pairing the Wavestation plugin with a newly emulated
Korg M1 plugin. The M1 plugin features 8-part
multitimbrality, a maximum of 256-note polyphony, and includes presets from all 19 optional ROM cards. A free update added the entire preset collection from the T-series workstations to the M1 plugin. Korg launched the
Legacy Collection Analogue Edition in 2007, which combined the MS20 and Polysix plugins with a new emulation of the
Mono/Poly. This new Mono/Poly plugin features eight virtual patches for enhanced modulation possibilities and increased polyphony of 128 voices.
Korg Collection (2017) In December 2017, Korg renamed the Legacy Collection series to the
Korg Collection and added an emulation of the
Arp Odyssey, which followed the physical hardware reissue of the ARP Odyssey in 2015 with help from David Friend, co-founder of
ARP Instruments.
Korg Collection 2 (2020) In April 2020, Korg introduced the
Collection 2, which provided updates to the previous plugins including scalable user interfaces and modern, high-definition graphics. These enhancements were provided free to existing users. The release also debuted an emulation of the
Korg Triton, offering all 4,000
PCM-based presets, encompassing most sounds from Korg’s eight PCM Expansion boards. This version enhanced the polyphony to 256 voices but omitted the sampler, sequencer, and the capability to run a MOSS engine found in the original instrument.
Korg Collection 4 (2022) The
Korg Collection 4, launched in November 2022, featured a
microKORG emulation that included the original's vocoder effect. This update also introduced a software effect named
Electribe-R, inspired by iElectribe for iPad, but with enhanced beat modes and the integration of effects and step sequencing capabilities from the Electribe-R hardware and its mkII iteration. Additionally, a new
Kaoss Pad effect was added, offering insights into its intricate internal architecture while maintaining the intuitive pad control interface.
Korg Collection 5 (2024) On July 19th, 2024, Korg released the Korg Collection 5, expanding its software suite with three new additions: the
ARP 2600, EP-1 electric piano, and
Vox Super Continental organ. This latest update includes the semi-modular ARP 2600 synthesizer, renowned for its distinct sounds and now featuring both classic modifications and entirely new modules. The EP-1 electric piano engine introduces seven models previously part of the
KRONOS series, while the Vox Super Continental offers a digital version of the combo organ. Notably, the ARP 2600 joins the ARP Odyssey in the collection, marking continued collaboration with
ARP Instruments co-founder David Friend.
Korg Collection 6 (2025) On October 28th, 2025, Korg released the Korg Collection 6, which include VST Versions of the Korg
Trinity, Korg
PS-3300 and the SGX2 Piano module from the Kronos. ==References==