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With presets in Cubase being developed as plugins, nearly all of the current presets are built from virtual plugins which are dropped at 'blank' positions on the channel strip, and the position of each name is filled by the plugin name. So you get the plugin name of the preset, and underneath, as you would expect, the plugin settings. For a virtual plugin that's about it, but for those new users to Cubase this is a really helpful feature, which you can see in action below.
So this is what that might look like. You can see that not only is the Preset name displayed, but the key settings of that plugin is also downloaded. It's really useful for someone new to Cubase to only see the plugin name, for instance, and know what's being applied, so that they don't need to hunt through the Edit menu to find the plugin in question. It also potentially makes it easier for plug-in authors to give instructions on their plug-ins, without wondering whether the users will understand what the presets are.
Then there's the somewhat curious new Chord Bar. As you might have guessed, the chord bar will display your current chord position, allowing you to see how you've arrived at that position. It also offers chord editing in the familiar piano roll style, with an undo/redo facility. You can play chords in any order in this bar, even play in minor keys on a major chord, but something that's a little clunky is that chords will only show up in the chord bar if you make a line by holding the chord keystrokes down. This bars is also where you set up duplicate chord sounds. It's kind of odd having to do this in a chord bar rather than the Mixer's Chord Panel, but I suppose it makes sense - in a perfect world you'd be able to drag and drop chords into the Mixer's Chord Panel, and I guess you can some day, but not in 12.5 d2c66b5586