This image shows the options menu where you can configure the bridging process.
Developed by Joao Moura ("J's stuff"), is a VST (Virtual Studio Technology) bridging application for Windows. It acts as an interpreter, creating a "bridged" version of a plugin that tricks your DAW into treating a 32-bit plugin as a 64-bit native one.
Point your 64-bit DAW to the new "bridged" folder.
Purchase and download from the official jBridge website . jbridge 175 new
The audio industry loves obsolescence. Plugin manufacturers want you to buy the yearly subscription. But is an act of digital preservation. It is the shield that stands between your creative workflow and the entropy of operating system updates.
The "jbridge 175 new" is not a major version overhaul, but a significant refinement. It focused on stability and compatibility with the then-newest DAWs.
For Logic Pro users, this is a game changer. now allows stable conversion of 32-bit VST3 plugins into Apple Audio Units (AU) with full parameter automation mapping. Previously, parameter lists often came in as "Generic Param 1, Generic Param 2." The new version intelligently scrapes the plugin's resource fork to rename parameters correctly. This image shows the options menu where you
Even with version 1.75, users occasionally run into setup issues.
No need to upgrade or replace paid 32-bit plugins with new 64-bit alternatives.
Modern Digital Audio Workstations (DAWs) have almost universally dropped support for legacy 32-bit architecture. This shift leaves music producers with a difficult choice: abandon classic, irreplaceable virtual instruments and effects, or find a way to make them work in a modern 64-bit environment. Point your 64-bit DAW to the new "bridged" folder
If you use BIAB, the tool works automatically. Once installed, BIAB will detect jBridge and automatically allow you to select 64-bit VSTs within the 32-bit version of the software.
By enabling 32-bit plugins to run as separate processes (auxhosts), jBridge 1.75 allows users to break past the 4GB RAM limit imposed on individual 32-bit processes, allowing for massive orchestration projects.