Asin,
"it is not as forward or details perhaps due to the loss of resolution on multichannel format."
Actually your brain cannot focus as well on the "little" details that are really unimportant in the end because you are immerssed in such a large soundfield. The resolution of the SACD is equal on each channel whether its 2 or 4 or 5 channels being played back. 2 channel is effectively removing 2/3rds of the ambiant field, it is actually lower resolution.
Why digital sounds so thin in two channels has everything to do with this over focused truncated soundstage and lack of an ambiant field. So for better or worse, your perception is a common one but not for the reasons you attribute it too.
There is no real decoding, except for system adjustment like distance your seated from the speakers.
"24bit/192KHz but multi channel is 24bit/96KHz" may change the sound but not the resolution.
"it is not as forward or details perhaps due to the loss of resolution on multichannel format."
Actually your brain cannot focus as well on the "little" details that are really unimportant in the end because you are immerssed in such a large soundfield. The resolution of the SACD is equal on each channel whether its 2 or 4 or 5 channels being played back. 2 channel is effectively removing 2/3rds of the ambiant field, it is actually lower resolution.
Why digital sounds so thin in two channels has everything to do with this over focused truncated soundstage and lack of an ambiant field. So for better or worse, your perception is a common one but not for the reasons you attribute it too.
There is no real decoding, except for system adjustment like distance your seated from the speakers.
"24bit/192KHz but multi channel is 24bit/96KHz" may change the sound but not the resolution.