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Tech

Roland’s Go:Mixer Studio is small, capable, and surprisingly flexible

The missing middle ground between USB mics and studio desks.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 20, 2026, 12:00 PM EST
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Roland Go:Mixer Studio audio mixer
Image: Roland
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Roland’s new Go:Mixer Studio feels like the natural next step for anyone who’s outgrown basic USB mics and two-input interfaces, but isn’t ready to blow pro-studio money just to record a song or level up their stream. It’s small, fairly priced for what it does, and clearly built with creators and budding recording engineers in mind rather than old‑school studio lifers.

At a glance, Go:Mixer Studio is Roland’s attempt to turn the “little white smartphone mixer” idea into a serious hub for your whole creative setup. You still get that portable, toss‑it‑in-a-backpack form factor, but now there are up to 12 input channels and six outputs to play with, plus proper studio‑grade audio up to 24‑bit/192 kHz. That means you can actually record multiple mics, an instrument or two, external gear, and still have room left over instead of constantly swapping cables.

The I/O is where you really see the upgrade. On the back are two XLR mic/line inputs with phantom power for condenser mics, a dedicated guitar/bass input, stereo ¼‑inch line‑ins for keyboards or drum machines, an aux input and TRS MIDI in/out for hardware synths or controllers. Up front, you get two headphone outputs plus stereo line outs for monitor speakers, so you can easily have a “control room” and “talent” headphone feed without a lot of splitter hacks. For a lot of home setups, this is the difference between “I’ll just track one thing at a time” and “let’s record the whole idea while everyone’s here.”

Creators who live on their phones and laptops will probably care more about how it fits into their workflow than about raw specs, and that’s exactly where Roland has done some smart work. Go:Mixer Studio connects to iPhone/iPad, macOS and Windows, but the iOS side gets a special perk: the companion app lets you capture video and multitrack audio at the same time, then adjust the mix after the fact. For streamers and music YouTubers, that means you don’t have to choose between “good audio with no video control” and “good video with mediocre phone audio.” You can shoot a performance, then rebalance vocals, guitar and backing tracks later, or even export stems into a DAW or video editor if you want to go deeper.

The hardware side feels intentionally “hands on.” There are big knobs for the main parameters and a color display that shows levels and settings, which makes dialing in a mix feel more like using a tiny console than poking at a phone screen. Onboard processing is surprisingly grown‑up: you get a three‑band EQ, compressor and reverb modeled after studio processors, and you can choose whether to print that processing into your recording or only use it for monitoring. Practically, that means you can give a vocalist a nice, confident headphone sound without committing the reverb and compression forever, or you can capture something closer to “finished” if you’re trying to move fast.​

Then there are the quality‑of‑life touches. A Loop Back function lets you bring in audio from your phone or computer over USB—think backing tracks, game audio, or a remote guest—and still record your mic and instruments cleanly over the top. Six outputs (three stereo pairs) and support for both full‑size studio headphones and standard earbuds give you flexibility whether you’re in a bedroom, a tiny studio, or shooting in a rented space. You can store up to 16 scene memories, so if you bounce between different show formats—podcast, solo stream, band session—you can recall the right routing and levels with a button press instead of rebuilding the mix every time.

One of the big questions for anyone looking at Go:Mixer Studio is how it stacks up against Roland’s own Go:Mixer Pro and Pro‑X, which are already popular with mobile creators. Those earlier models are ultra‑portable and can handle up to seven inputs, but they’re more “smartphone mixer” than full creative hub. Go:Mixer Studio jumps the channel count, adds higher‑end audio resolutions, deeper onboard processing, TRS MIDI, multiple outputs, and the multitrack video workflow that the older units simply don’t offer. If Go:Mixer Pro‑X is the pocket solution you throw into a bag “just in case,” Go:Mixer Studio is the centerpiece you actually build a small rig around.

Physically, it’s still very much in the “mobile gear” category: compact, light, easy to mount on a mic stand or tripod so it can live right next to your camera or laptop. That matters when your “studio” is a desk that also doubles as your editing station and dining table. Being able to clamp the interface to a mic stand, plug in a couple of mics, a guitar, maybe a keyboard, and then clear it all away in a minute is what makes this usable for normal people instead of just studio nerds.

From a value standpoint, the Go:Mixer Studio lands at around $300 in the US, which puts it above beginner two‑input interfaces but comfortably below many full‑blown desktop mixers with similar flexibility. The pitch isn’t “cheapest possible interface” so much as “everything you actually need to sound like you know what you’re doing.” If you’re a student, bedroom producer, podcaster, or small‑scale streaming engineer, it hits that sweet spot where you can grow into the features without feeling like you bought way more box than you’ll ever use.

Where it really shines is in those hybrid use cases that didn’t exist a decade ago. Picture a two‑person podcast with video, where one host is remote on a call, there’s an intro track, maybe a hardware synth for some live stings, and chat alerts for a simultaneous stream. Go:Mixer Studio can juggle all of that: multiple mics with phantom power, a stereo input from a synth or keyboard, USB loopback from the computer, and MIDI for any external controller you want to throw in. With scene memories and onboard processing, you could practically run a small production without touching software faders.

Of course, this isn’t meant to replace a full rack of outboard gear in a commercial studio. You’re not getting endless routing matrices, multiple hardware sends, or a mixer that can handle a full band with separate monitor mixes for everyone. But that’s also the point. Go:Mixer Studio keeps the complexity low enough that you can plug it in, glance at the screen, turn a few knobs and be ready to record or go live in minutes. For most new engineers and creators, that ease of use is worth more than an extra bank of channels they’ll never touch.

If you’re just starting to take recording seriously, or if your content has outgrown the limits of a single USB mic, Go:Mixer Studio is the sort of box that makes the next step feel achievable instead of intimidating. It hits a sweet middle ground: small enough to throw in a bag, powerful enough to anchor a real production, and priced so that “getting better audio” doesn’t require a studio‑level budget.


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