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I am using XNA's SoundEffect class to play sounds in a game project. While the memory management of directly SoundEffect.Play()ing effects is relatively clear to me (SoundEffectInstances are internally created and added to lists, and their memory is removed upon sound stopping), I would like to know what is advised to do when directly creating SoundEffectInstances e.g. to control audio playback (volume etc.) after instance.Play().

Currently, for those sound effects that I need to control after creation I use a special class that in its constuctor creates a new instance by:

instance = LoadEffect(indexInSoundLibrary).CreateInstance();

while in the destructor of that class calls:

instance.Dispose();

In summary, I use a collection of ~400 sound files (just their filename) that are dynamically loaded whenever needed. Does it make sense to keep a number of SoundEffectInstances in memory (e.g. for those audio files in the collection that are typically played by creating a SoundEffectInstance (and not by directly using the SoundEffect.Play())?

Are there any limitations of how many SoundEffectInstances can be kept in memory at a time?

Just for additional information, I use multiple ContentManagers and regularly Unload unused sounds.

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