A higher resolution doesn’t make the swing itself more “tame”; you can shift those even-numbered steps just as far out with a high PPQ as you can with a low PPQ.

It is true that your control over the amount of swing applied gets coarser the lower the resolution of the sequencer which is related to the point I made earlier in this thread:
Something else to note is that most older drum machines, including the MPC apply swing as part of the quantization process which means that you can’t grab the “swing amount” knob, turn it, and hear the result of your adjustments like you can in a DAW or on any of the Elektron boxes.

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Right I see what you mean but the point is just low PPQ machines have a coarse swing, high PPQ machines don’t by default (but of course they are technically capable of, hence groove templates).

As for MPCs… there is indeed no real-time swing knob, it’s an option inside the quantize settings. but that doesn’t really change anything as far swing results. it is to note that on Tempest the swing amount is fixed to point decimal values Roger Linn found the grooviest such as 56.3% or 62.5% within a 50 to 75% range (like on MPCs).