Beat-makers love FL Studio for a reason, but the step sequencer and Piano Roll both snap everything to a perfect grid. To make programmed drums feel like a performance, you need to break that grid intentionally. FL gives you several ways to do it.

1. The Randomize tool in the Piano Roll

Select your drum notes, then open Tools → Randomize (or the dice menu). This panel can randomize velocity, pan, and timing all at once:

  • Enable Velocity with a moderate range so hits aren't all identical.
  • Use a small Time offset for subtle micro-timing.
  • Leave the pattern itself intact — you're loosening feel, not rewriting the beat.

2. The LFO / Tools → "Humanize" approach

FL's Tools → Articulator and the velocity tools let you draw dynamic curves across a bar. Hand-drawing a gentle velocity slope into a fill, or a dip on ghost notes, does more for realism than any random pass.

Pro Tip

In the step sequencer, hold and drag the small graph editor under each channel to set per-step velocity. A two-minute pass varying kick and hat velocity transforms a stiff loop.

3. Manual timing nudges

Turn snapping to (none) or a fine value and move hits by hand:

  • Push the snare slightly ahead for drive, or behind for a laid-back feel.
  • Offset hi-hats a touch to create swing without quantizing to triplets.
  • Keep kicks tight to the bass so the low end stays locked.
Common Mistake

Maxing out the Randomize time range scatters your drums into mush. Real drummers stay within a tight window — think a few milliseconds, not a sixteenth note.

One step instead of three

DeMidify replaces the randomize-and-pray workflow with a model trained on real drummers. Export your pattern as a MIDI file from FL Studio, run it through DeMidify, pick a genre feel, and import the humanized groove right back into the Piano Roll.

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Exporting MIDI from FL Studio

Right-click the pattern in the Playlist or use File → Export → MIDI file to save your drums. After humanizing, import with File → Import → MIDI file onto a pattern that triggers your drum samples (FPC, a layered channel, etc.).

The bottom line

FL Studio's randomize and velocity tools can absolutely humanize drums if you put in the time and have the ear for it. When you'd rather keep your creative momentum, DeMidify applies real drummer feel in one step and hands the MIDI right back.