Serum 2 vs Serum 1: What’s New, What Changed & Is It Worth Upgrading in 2025?

Serum has been a cornerstone of electronic music production for over a decade. But with Serum 2 finally landing, producers are asking: Is this a must-have upgrade - or more of the same with a fresh coat of paint?

After testing Serum 2 extensively - and diving deep into advanced workflows - here’s how it stacks up against the original.

Serum 2 GUI and FX Layout
Worth the hype??

FX Engine Upgrade

One of the most creative additions in Serum 2 is the ability to use multiple instances of the same effect. Want two distortions and a delay after that? No problem.

This opens up a new world of modular FX chains and distortion layering, allowing more experimental sound design without leaving the synth:

  • Stack phasers or flangers for metallic chaos
  • Run multiple compressors at different stages
  • Create parallel-style FX chains using volume macros
Serum 2 FX Tab in action

Modulation & Macro Enhancements

While Serum 1 already offered flexible modulation - including assigning macros to LFO rate or shape - Serum 2 improves how that system looks, feels, and scales:

  • 8 macro slots instead of 4
  • Improved modulation matrix layout for faster workflow
  • More visual clarity on modulation ranges and types

These upgrades help streamline modulation-heavy patches, especially for complex setups using multiple mod sources. If you're keen to explore techniques like macro-based LFO pattern switching, WHZLY walks through it in the Serum 2 Production Course.

Serum 2 Modulation Macros (8 slots)

New Filters & Advanced Routing

The new PZDF filter morphs between multiple filter shapes with XY-based control - ideal for dynamic bass textures. Combine that with:

  • Vocal/formant-style filters
  • New high-pass morph types
  • Improved drive and resonance control
Serum 2 PZDF Filter Morphing with Path LFO

Nested Modulation Upgrades

Serum 1 let you modulate one LFO’s rate using another - a favorite trick for evolving rhythms. Serum 2 builds on this by exposing more modulation targets like rise, delay, and direction controls, allowing for layered, expressive movement inside a single preset.

  • Create staggered groove transitions between LFOs
  • Shape LFO start timing using another LFO's output
  • Design reactive polyrhythms with one-preset automation
Serum 2 LFO1 Modulating LFO2 Rate and Rise

Interface & Workflow Enhancements

  • FX panel supports multiple modules of the same type (e.g. two distortions)
  • Refined matrix layout and LFO shape browser
  • UI remains fully scalable and readable across high-DPI screens

While the CPU load remains similar to Serum 1, these usability upgrades help speed up complex patch building - especially for sound designers who live in the Matrix panel.

Serum 1 vs Serum 2 UI Comparison
Feature Serum 1 Serum 2
Primary Oscillators 2 wavetable oscillators 3 oscillators (wavetable, sample, granular, spectral)
Warp Types One per oscillator Two simultaneous warps (FM, PD, etc.)
Oscillator Engines Wavetable only Wavetable, sample, granular, spectral
Filters 1 filter 2 filters & new types)
FX Modules One per type, serial Multiple per type, dual buses, new FX
Modulation Sources 4 LFOs, 2 envs, 4 macros 10 LFOs, 4 envs, 8 macros, chaos & path
Mixer & Routing Basic levels Full mixer tab with flexible routing
Sequencer / Arp Not included Built-in clip sequencer & arpeggiator
Preset Browser Basic Live preview, tagging, fast search

Final Thoughts

If you’re a casual user or just browsing presets, Serum 1 is still extremely capable.

But if you love building sounds from scratch, working with modulation, and experimenting with FX routing - Serum 2 is a refined, future-proof upgrade.

And if you're keen to learn the deeper tricks covered here, there are some great sound design resources out there that explore these techniques in action - from macro pattern flipping to advanced filter morphing setups.

You can also grab the full Serum 2 Reloaded Producer Bundle, which includes WHZLY’s course, exclusive presets, and custom samples designed to push Serum 2 to the limit.