
The Glitch effect modules include tape stop, modulator, retrigger, shuffler, reverser, crusher, gater, delay and stretcher.

The effects themselve come in the form of guitar stomp box like modules which themselves have a number of adjustable parameters, variables and presets. The effect for each segment can be random, preset to one of the effect modules or bypassed to the original clean audio. There are controls to adjust the level and amount of the effect as well as the length of the sequence and mix of the effect on the original sound. A variety of effects can then be applied and mixed into those segments and the sequence looped. The incoming audio gets divided into individual steps of various lengths. You can think of Glitch (Current Version 1.3.04) as a kind of multi effect sequencer. Glitch from DBlue (Kieran Foster) is a good multi-effect processor with some unique features that enables it to stand out from the long list of available free VST effects. “Glitch is one of the more interesting free VST effect plugins available.

I have 4 gigs of ram and an old i5 2.8ghz quad core in my computer, and my laptop can play these songs better, which is an i5 1.8 quad.In the developer´s page the free version it´s on the “Old VST Plug-ins Pack” section My processor itself is not showing any signs of it starting to die, and my ram is perfectly fine. I've also played around with my ASIO settings, such as increasing my buffer size, or launching the extended memory version of FL. The only thing I think could've caused this was I installed MalwareBytes, ran it, and removed one thing the day before, but since then I have uninstalled that program. I've tried doing nearly everything to fix it, such as disabling plugins that require a bridge like Fusion Field, reinstalling my copy of FL, reinstalling VSTs that were having trouble responding, such as Nexus taking 4 times a long opening a preset or Massive having trouble smoothly turning knobs. About a week ago, FL Studio 10 started playing projects back at nearly 100% CPU usage, when they used to run around 15-30% (I think).
