
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. 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. 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. with the version 5.0.3 I had no problem, I was able to add the library and create my custom instruments, but with the latest version of kontakt when I click on 'add library' and choose my custom library nothing happen, the program get the command but no library appears in the library browser. 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.
