If you say so, but what's all this "masked in the mix" nonsense? What does that even mean? Most people in modern music have their guitars loud and proud. Too loud for my tastes usually, but they're obviously not trying to hide anything. Do you record so you can whip out the soapbox and shout "these are real amps!", or do you record to make music?
I never really make a point of mentioning anywhere the instruments or techniques I use to record a specific song...so really, I'm not shouting anything about "using real amps".
AFA masking...everyone (not just me) keeps repeating that
"in a mix you can't tell it's a sim"...so that sure sounds to me like those people are really saying,
" I know it's a sim, but no one will be able to tell when it's in a mix".
AFA "high-end" sim software...I'm not sure which software specifically you are referring to. If there is something you want me to check out that I can demo for free...tell me, but I'm not going to go buy a "high-end" sim pack just to try it out.
Again...my main beef with most sims I've tried/heard is when you just hear the sim in the room. I don't really care or consider that it may not be noticeable later on in a mix.
If you think I'm just saying that to beat my chest about "real amps" or that I've not ever heard "good" sims to know...well, I can't really prove it to you...but side-by-side, up to now, I've easily heard a difference in a digital sim VS an amp, in the room when I'm playing it. That matters to me.
I think when people just use a LOT of sims and they dial through only sims all day long, their ears maybe get use to that, and after awhile they just pick which sim they like or dislike....so they are not really comparing sims directly to any amps. If they have nothing but one or two "so-so" amps, and they don't have good mics/techniques to record them with...then yeah, in the end, for them, sims may win out.
I think it was you that had the sig line "if it sounds good, it is good", right? I understand your point because I'd personally never in a million years use electronic drums or programmed samples because I don't get the immediate feedback of pounding on real drums. But if the end result is just making a song that sounds good then it really doesn't matter. And in the realm of home-recording, where people usually use amateur level gear at best, sims damn near always sound better than what people capture from their real amps.
Yes...I am a proponent of doing what you have to do make the end product sound as best as you can. I don't have a problem with that approach.
I'm just saying that for me, sims are not my first choice if I can get there with a real amp, because I CAN hear the digital flavor of sims while I'm auditioning the tones and also when tracking...and I don't really like what I hear. I can get better tones recorded with one of my amps.
Not sure why that statement would bother anyone or why ianyone would think I'm just making it up so I can shout "I use real amps"...?

If anything...I find that the dedictated sim/pod users do a lot more shouting about how great their tones are and that they have no need for real amps.
Oh...the OP that started the thread brought this all up...so I'm not making it a point to just slam sims or shouting about using real amps.
I have no desire or interest to convert sim users into "real amp" users...or any such thing., I just post up my own epxeriences with sims/amps...and so far, I'm still leaning toward using real amps in my own work.