Why can't you just answer my question?!? That video showed nothing about recording audio and editing it. I'm beginning to think your product doesn't do anything. The support is certainly lousy. You could have just answered me yes or no and we would be done.
Please come I beg of you. Just answer me yes or no can I make my own loops? I don't need a video I don't need a dissertation, I don't need a tutorial and I certainly don't need a deflection. You have absolutely no support for this product on the web. There is no longer one dealer in the United States. There is not one person I can speak to on the phone to ask them a simple question before I spend hundreds of dollars on your product. I suggest you rethink your decision to isolate the United States as a market.
@B3BobCancro This is a user forum. We are all just users like you. No Magix staff is here so this isn't "our" product.
Yes, you can create your own loops. I don't understand why you think this shouldn't be possible. You can record audio with a microphone or use VST instruments like in every other music production software and therefore create your own loops.
You can download the free demo version and try it out. There is no need for you to spend hundreds of dollars without checking the software out at first.
As @SP. stated, these are user to user forums, there are NO Magix staff here. The answer you were given by @PATIENT-X is the only one that any of us can give; @SP. has pointed out to you that the software essentially functions like a standard DAW and thus, the creation of loops is perfectly possible.
Please do not reply with any sort of rant about support, or lack of it. We, as users, have no control whatsoever over any decision that Magix, the company, may make. None of us are Magix employees.
As to your final post about the demo for ACID; when you say it wouldn't open can you give us a little more detail. We must assume that you have a PC running Windows, preferably at least Win 10 and that you have successfully installed the program. Is that correct? You then attempt to open it to run it and ... what happens, what do you see?