In the world of music production, few tools have garnered as much love (and gentle mockery) as . This iconic pink plugin, native to Image-Line’s FL Studio, is famous for doing exactly what its name promises: making your tracks sound “gooder.” But for producers using other Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) like Ableton Live, Logic Pro, or Pro Tools, the frustration is real. How do you get that signature sauce without owning FL Studio?

Soundgoodizer is a legendary instant-audio-optimization plugin built into FL Studio. It is famous for making tracks sound polished with just one knob. Many music producers want to use it in other digital audio workstations (DAWs) like Ableton Live, Logic Pro, or Reaper.

The interface is famously simple. There is one large knob with four preset modes marked around its rotation:

Instead of forcing you to tweak dozens of complex compression thresholds, attack times, and frequency bands, Soundgoodizer simplifies the process into:

Example 2 — Glueing a mix on the master bus (use with caution)

Yes, Image-Line offers a VST version of Soundgoodizer that can be used in other Digital Audio Workstations (like Ableton Live, Logic Pro, Pro Tools, etc.).

: Adjusts the mix phase, blending the processed signal with the original audio from 0% to 100%.

For users of FL Studio, Image-Line's flagship digital audio workstation (DAW), Soundgoodizer is instantly recognizable. It's a "maximizer-enhancer" plugin designed for quick, intuitive use. Its interface is famously simple: one large central knob and four preset buttons labeled A, B, C, and D.

Putting Soundgoodizer on your master channel can easily squash your entire song into a distorted block of noise. Use it on individual instruments, like an acoustic guitar or a vocal bus, rather than the whole track.