Arturia Prophet-5 V vs u-he Repro-5
Specs, price and the Dubspot Score, side by side — with our verdict on which synth to buy.
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Both plugins chase the exact same target: the 1978 Sequential Prophet-5, arguably the most sampled and cloned five-voice analog polysynth in history. Arturia's Prophet-5 V and u-he's Repro-5 land within a few euros of each other in price, so the question is never really about cost. It's about how deep you want the emulation to go, and what you're willing to trade to get there.
The key difference
The decisive split is emulation philosophy. Repro-5 is a component-level circuit model, simulating the actual electronic behavior of the oscillators, the four-pole filter, and the per-voice drift, which is why purists rate its raw analog fidelity slightly higher and why it self-oscillates and distorts so convincingly. Prophet-5 V models the SSM VCOs and 2040 filter with vintage drift as well, but leans toward efficiency and playability rather than transistor-for-transistor accuracy. That single choice cascades into everything else: Repro-5 sounds a hair more alive but is genuinely CPU-hungry at high polyphony, unison, and oversampling, while Prophet-5 V stays light and immediate on the same session.
Choose Prophet-5 V if you want that classic five-voice sound in a light, effects-ready, immediately playable plugin you can stack across many tracks without freezing them.
Choose Repro-5 if you prize the last increment of circuit-level analog fidelity and self-oscillating filter character, and you don't mind heavier CPU load and a cramped vintage panel.
Which should you buy?
For pure tone chasers who will happily freeze and bounce tracks to get the last five percent of authenticity, Repro-5 edges it and earns its 8.8. But at effectively the same price, Prophet-5 V delivers roughly the same iconic sound with far lighter CPU, sixteen built-in effects, an arpeggiator, and a more modern feel, which makes it the better everyday pick for most producers. Neither is a versatile workstation, so pick the one whose trade-off you can live with, not the higher number.
Specs compared
| Arturia Prophet-5 V | u-he Repro-5 | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $149 | €149 |
| Dubspot Score | 8.5 | 8.8 |
| Formats | VST, VST3, Audio Unit (AU), AAX, NKS, Standalone | VST3, AU, AAX, CLAP, Linux |
| Emulated hardware | Prophet-5 Rev 2 | — |
| Oscillators | 2 modeled SSM VCOs with 5 waveforms, noise generator, hard-sync | 2 multi-wave oscillators (saw/pulse and saw/triangle/pulse) |
| Filter | Modeled SSM 2040 low-pass filter | 4-pole resonant lowpass filter |
| Modulation | Poly-Mod | — |
| Arpeggiator | 5-pattern arpeggiator | — |
| Effects | 16 built-in effects across 3 configurable slots | — |
| Microtuning | MPE and MTS-ESP compatible | — |
| Synth type | — | Component-level model of a famous 5-voice polyphonic synthesizer from 1978 |
| Polyphony | — | 8 voice polyphonic, or up to 8 voice unison with optional glide |
| Factory presets | — | Over 950 factory presets |
| Additional features | — | Polyphonic distortion unit with 4 modes; MPE support for polyphonic presets (v1.1.3+); built-in effects (delay/chorus, EQ/resonator, plate reverb, sonic conditioner) |
Arturia Prophet-5 V vs u-he Repro-5: FAQ
Is Prophet-5 V or Repro-5 more accurate to the real Prophet-5?
Repro-5 has the edge on raw fidelity because it models the actual circuit behavior component by component, which is why analog purists tend to rank it slightly higher. Prophet-5 V is still a faithful, drifting emulation of the Rev 2, but it prioritizes efficiency and playability over transistor-level accuracy.
Which one is easier on my CPU?
Prophet-5 V is noticeably lighter and stays comfortable across many instances in a session. Repro-5's circuit-level modeling is expensive, so stacking eight voices with unison and higher oversampling can tax even capable machines, meaning you'll often freeze or bounce those tracks.
They cost about the same, so which is better value?
At $149 versus €149 the price is essentially a wash, so value comes down to fit. Prophet-5 V bundles into V Collection and includes sixteen effects and an arpeggiator, while Repro-5 ships alongside the monophonic Repro-1 and adds a four-mode distortion unit plus over 950 presets, so the better deal is whichever workflow matches how you actually produce.
See the full plugin database for more comparisons.