Making Sound Machines Announces Plinky 12 Expressive Touch Synthesizer Ahead Of Superbooth 2026


Ahead of Superbooth 2026, scheduled on May 7-9, 2026 at the FEZ-Berlin, German developer Making Sound Machines has announced the Plinky 12 Blocks, Chords & Toadstep – a trio of touch-focused instruments with three swappable faceplates, each of which makes use of the same core hardware design and a shared synth engine.

Plinky 12’s hardware is designed around swappable panels. Instead of one fixed control surface, it can become different instruments built for different kinds of musical thinking.

Plinky 12 is, essentially, a single instrument, although its interchangeable panels allow it to function in a multitude of different ways. According to its developer, this concept means that “it can become different instruments built for different kinds of musical thinking”.

Each iteration of Plinky 12 will be available as a fully assembled distinct instrument, but additional panels will be available to purchase separately, allowing owners to expand the capabilities of the unit.

The Plinky 12 series is an evolution of the original Plinky, an open-source touch-sensitive polysynth that is available in both DIY and fully assembled forms.

Beneath the faceplate, each Plinky 12 unit is built around the same 12-inch by 12-inch hardware, based on a RP2350 microcontroller CPU and equipped with MIDI and CV I/O, as well as a stereo unbalanced audio input and output and USB connectivity.

The hardware interface consists of a 16×16 grid of touch capacitive buttons, the functionality of which is dictated by the attached faceplate. Each of the three variations in the initial range is created by a different designer and allows users to interact with the machine in a unique way.

Chords is designed by Making Sound Machines itself, and is described as a ‘harmonic inspiration machine’. The layout is intended to aid improvisation around melodic and harmonic patterns, with expressive control over chord voicing and progressions.

Toadstep is a sequencer layout created in collaboration with Eurorack developer Toadstool Tech, known for its Ectocore sampling module. The Toadstep turns the Plinky 12 interface into a 4-track sequencer designed for performing with acid-style synth riffs and generative melodies.

Blocks is the most open and adaptable of the three configurations. It’s designed by mmalex, who is one of the developers behind Making Sound Machines and designer of the original Plinky synth. It uses a monome-compatible grid for touch-controlled synthesis, based on the original Plinky concept. A browser-based code editor will also be launched alongside the Plinky 12, allowing users to create their own custom grid controllers.

In all cases, Plinky 12 makes use of the same sample-based polyphonic synth engine, which the developer says can ‘turn samples from simple sounds into frozen wavetables’. According to Making Music Machines, “since synth presets, system settings and certain control styles like LFOs and envelopes are shared across panels, once you learn one panel, the others already start to make sense.”

In the demo videos – above – it sounds appropriately bright and percussive, befitting of its onomatopoeic name.

The interchangeable faceplates can be swapped using a screwdriver. The Plinky hardware will automatically adjust to any new faceplate, adapting the software without the need to change the firmware.

The Plinky 12 will be sold pre-assembled, with additional panels available separately.

There’s no definitive word as yet on a release date or price, but the Plinky 12 will be on display at Superbooth next month, and Making Sound Machines promises the instruments will have a price that is “as competitive as we can make it.”

Visit the official website for more information and to sign up for updates.

 

Superbooth 26 Returns To Berlin May 7 – 9, 2026


Organizers of Superbooth – the Berlin-based international synth expo – have announced dates for the 2026 show.

Superbooth 26 will return to the FEZ-Berlin on May 7-9, 2026. The 2026 event will mark the tenth anniversary of Superbooth  as an independent festival and trade fair for electronic musical instruments.

The organizers say that Superbooth 2025 “was again a big success overall that brought together more guests and exhibitors than any previous SuperBooth, with over 8800 attendees, as well as 301 exhibitors from 31 countries celebrating the practice and culture of electronic musical instruments across three days.”

They also note that some changes may be coming for the 2026 event to address rising costs:

“This year, one of the major hurdles was a significant rise in costs related to necessary event logistics snd resources.

As one of the SUPERBOOTH‘s core missions is, and will continue to be, providing affordable exhibition opportunities to smaller brands and manufacturers — while also continuing to develop the musical and cultural programming — the SUPERBOOTH’s event concept will be under review for 2026, with an exploration of possible adjustments and opportunities in order to adapt to various new and ongoing developments.”

We’ll share more details as they are announced. See the Superbooth site for more information.