Woody Piano Shack’s Gear Bloodbath: Tier Rankings, Regrets, and

Think your GAS is wild? Woody Piano Shack just did the unthinkable: tier-ranked every synth, groovebox, and drum machine from his three-year gear binge – and tallied the financial carnage. Expect honesty, sarcasm, and a brutal breakdown of what slaps, what flops, and how much cash went up in smoke. Woody’s style is all about no-nonsense keyboard fun, and here he spills the beans on workflow disasters, surprise legends, and the harsh sting of gear guilt. If you want to know which box is a secret rave weapon and which is just a plastic regret, this is your new gospel (but you’ll have to watch for the gory sound demos).

Thirty Machines, One Tier List: Welcome to the Stashocalypse

Woody Piano Shack kicks things off with a cold sweat: over thirty synths, drum machines, and grooveboxes wrangled in just a few feverish years. This isn’t your average synth haul – it’s a borderline intervention scenario, with a grand total of $4,160 dropped on a wild variety of gear. The mission? Make interesting videos, test the full spectrum, then send most of them packing. And now, for our entertainment (and possibly his therapy), Woody lays them all bare on a tier list, from boutique beauties to looper letdowns.

What makes this binge different is Woody’s ruthless honesty and infectious energy. He’s not just ticking boxes; every device’s fate is revealed with no filter, grit, and a sprinkle of British wit. The parade begins with the Boss RC-202, making a rare profit, then barrels through Roland classics, Arturia oddballs, and Korg mono legends. If you’re expecting reverence for big names, think again – everything’s up for public shaming or praise. The only safe bet? There will be carnage, comedy, and plenty of synths getting the boot.


The Thousand Dollar Burn: Counting the Lost Pennies

Let’s talk pain: after all the buying and selling, Woody’s wallet is lighter by about $1,000. That’s after tallying up the sale prices, not even including all the shipping and fees (another $500 gone, just like that). It’s what happens when you go full gear goblin, chasing the next best thing and flogging yesterday’s hero on the used market. But hey, as Woody says, it’s all part of the experiment – and at least he got some YouTube ad revenue and a mountain of hands-on experience along the way.

So a loss of about $1,000 to check out, test, and have fun, and enjoy all of that gear.

© Screenshot/Quote: Woodypianoshack (YouTube)

Winners, Losers, and WTFs: Woody’s Brutal Device Verdicts

It's compact, it's cheap, it's got tons of hands-on controls, one knob per function.

© Screenshot/Quote: Woodypianoshack (YouTube)

Woody goes device by device, sparing no feelings. Some boxes, like the Korg Monologue and OP-Z, get crowned as absolute street weapons: compact, hands-on, and just begging to be played in a rave bunker. Others – looking at you, OG OP-1 and certain Roland boutiques – get dragged for workflow crimes, dodgy build, or just sounding like a toaster fighting a hair dryer. Each evaluation is a cocktail of price paid, cash lost (or rarely, gained), and whether the thing actually inspired music or just gathered dust. When a synth has a joystick that crackles or a looper that bricks itself, Woody calls it out. If a groovebox has more button combos than a cheat code manual, it’s not escaping unscathed.

But there’s nuance: some gear gets a high rank even if it’s sold on, simply because it brought joy or nailed its sound. The Behringer TD-3, Roland TB-03, and MC-101 all get their moments in the sun, but none escape the harsh light of comparison. Woody’s main gripes? Overcomplicated menus, underwhelming polyphony, and that eternal curse: tiny outputs. If you want every war story and sonic facepalm, you’ll have to watch for the detailed anecdotes and raw sound examples.

Gear Guilt and Creative Rotation: Why the Stash Must Die

After the dust settles, Woody gets real about the emotional side of gear collecting. ‘Gear guilt’ is the mood: that nagging feeling when synths sit in the corner, unused and unloved, just ticking down your bank balance while you chase new toys. Woody admits he needs to rotate his arsenal to stay inspired – and to avoid the existential dread of a room full of intimidating, rarely-touched boxes. The plan? Keep the absolute bangers, sell the rest, and make space for the next wave of sonic chaos. Turns out, even A-tier kit gets the boot if it’s not firing up the creative bunker.

I get a lot of gear guilt, actually, by having instruments just gathering dust that I barely ever use except for making videos.

© Screenshot/Quote: Woodypianoshack (YouTube)

Watch for the Carnage: Why You Need the Full Video

This write-up only scratches the surface – Woody’s video is packed with stories, sound demos, and on-the-spot reactions you won’t get here. If you want to hear the OP-1’s alleged sonic crimes or the punch of a Model D in actual battle, you’ll need his hands-on jams and honest outbursts. The moral? Gear churn is real, tier lists are savage, and sometimes losing a grand is just the price of knowing what really slaps. Go watch the whole rampage for the full experience.


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