In an era of hybrid streaming, introduces Session Mode . Two DJs can connect over Wi-Fi or LAN, with one controlling the primary decks and the second controlling two “guest decks” that feed into the main mixer’s aux channel. The second DJ can hotcue, loop, and apply FX, and changes are latency-compensated to ±20ms. This isn’t quite real-time b2b in the same room, but it’s a massive step for remote podcast collabs.
One complaint leveled at Serato DJ Pro historically was its cluttered, deck-heavy layout—perfect for four-deck jugglers but overwhelming for mobile gigs. introduces a modular UI called Focus Mode . With a single keystroke (Ctrl+F or Cmd+Shift+F), the software collapses secondary decks, the library panel, and the sampler into a single, waveform-focused view reminiscent of a mixer’s built-in display. serato version 3.0
If there is one reason the DJ community is buzzing about , it is the official public release of Serato Stems. While stems (the ability to separate a track into vocal, melody, bass, and drum parts) have been available in competitor software like Virtual DJ and through third-party plugins like XTRAX STEMS, Serato held back until they could deliver a solution that fit their high-performance standards. In an era of hybrid streaming, introduces Session Mode