So it probably installs/doesn't-install the 64bit vsts based on whatever it's sniffed out about your machine. However, I suspect it does not ask about such things when you install Native Access, because I never would have told it "yes, please install 32-bit vsts", yet there they are. But that's entirely conjecture on my part, and I'm not going to uninstall all my NI crap to find out. These Libraries can be installed directly from Native Access: Start Native Access. If you are running a 64bit OS but Native Access is not installing 64 bit plugins, I suppose it's possible that when you installed Native Access it might have asked which subset of possible plugin formats (32- or 64-bit vst2, vst3, aax, etc.) you want to use, and saved that as the default for all product installations. Third-party KONTAKT Libraries purchased from the NI Webshop. If not, are you even running a 64 bit version of Windows 10? (See Settings | System | About under the gear icon in the start menu.) If you're running a 32-bit Windows, then obviously you can't use 64-bit plugins. On my system, I have a directories VSTPlugins 32 bit and VSTPlugins 64 bit under C:\Program Files\Native Instruments - which Native Access created by default, without me ever telling it anything, back when I installed the NI stuff on this computer, and when I reinstalled Kontakt 6 Player it correctly dropped a Kontakt.dll in each of those subdirectories.Īre you saying you don't have a VSTPlugins 64 bit subdirectory at all? Indeed, it never asks what type(s) of plugins you want, it just does what it does. Just for the hell of it, I uninstalled Kontakt 6 Player, and reinstalled it.
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