Current equipment similar to ancient DBX 14/10 and/or 20/20 computerized equalizers?


I had an ancient DBX 14/10 equalizer ages ago and found it quite useful at times. As best I can tell, there is no modern equivalent. Or am I missing something? Moreover, they seen to be as scarce as hen's teeth on eBay and the various audio equipment listing sites. Even the more common (at least, I thought more common) 20/20 is seldom seen.

Suggestions, anyone?
weh51nc
Should have known a mic and a laptop could replace the old EQ setup. That's perfect. Thanks, pragmas.
Behringer works but I do NOT like them.

If you are streaming, Roon has parametric EQs built in.

If you want a very flexible unit, miniDSP has a number of EQ's and crossovers you can use in your gear.

Schiit Loki is a 4 band tone control a lot like.
Actually, what I want is to use sound spectrum analysis and an equalizer as a tool to determine a room's characteristics such that I can adjust positions of speakers, furniture, and whatever else might be needed to tame the room's acoustics and obviate (or mostly) the need for the equalizer, removing it from the system completely.

I'm going to investigate the miniDSP UMIK-1 microphone and Room EQ Wizard software for starters. I'll make a decision for hardware solutions only if necessary.
Both the Anthem STR (US$4k DAC-preamp) and any product incorporating Dirac Live will integrate multiple measurement positions. The Anthem can store only 4 at a time, but settings and graphs can be stored in files to recall them later. Among the nicer Dirac units is the miniDSP SHD family (about $900 for digital in and out only, $1200 as a full preamp.
Mike_in_nc, I'm also in NC (I'm assuming your NC is North Carolina - or it could be New Caledonia).

I'm putting together something that may be serious stupidity on my part, but I'm doing it anyway. I'm recreating the past. I have had little more than a table radio alarm clock since the mid-'80's when my -- at that time -- very high-end audio system was stolen with no insurance to cover the loss. Retired and bored with being to some degree shut in because of the pandemic, I've begun to recreate in spirit what was lost.

I'm pretty sure that many of the audiophiles who frequent these fora will think me somewhat out of my mind. And I'm sure that there are better choices among today's equipment for some of the components I've chosen. That doesn't really matter to me. The items I've already purchased and those I'm still hunting were easily among the top 1% in their day, and I suspect that they are still within a few percent of the best that is current.

I've over-paid on a couple of items because of my nostalgia (I've created a virtual system under that name), however, in other cases, I've gotten significant bargains. I'm going to have to spend some money refurbishing some of the equipment -- some of which I will do myself (having built Knight, Heath, Dynaco & Hafler kits aplenty back in the '60's & '70's) and some I will farm out to the experts. In the end, I'm having fun and that's what it's all about.