The BDDI is probably one of the most overhyped bass effects I've ever had in my arsenal. What you end up with is a harsh ice-pick top with an insanely muddy bottom, zero definition. It has no mid control and by default, the more the unit is enabled, the more it boosts low end and high end.
Breezy where the snare drum started to sharly pierce above the balance. My biggest problem with tone started from the Sansamp BDDI. I'd recommend going for mp3 224 kbps as it's the standard iTunes format, or 128 kbps (soundcloud standard) if you wanna preserve disk space. Here is the list: Flat, Bass Boost, Pop, Pop+Bass, Dance, Hip Hop, R&B, Rap. (remember, the EQing might add a lot of dynamic so don't hesitate to go hard with the limiter compression, I usually crank everything almost to the max on my Sausage Fatteners ) Then you could add a Fruity Limiter to avoid clipping, but if you can, get a copy of Dada Life's Sausage Fattener and adjust the compression to taste. (some people prefer A or C mode, but D is the way to go for bass boosting, it's like D for Dominating Doomsday Bassy and trust me it does wonders on your low-end)
Then add a soundgoodizer FX, put it to 'D' in the mode selection at the bottom and crank it up all the way.
Just use a yolopass filter with FL Parametric EQ 2 (copy the following screenshot parameters) (be sure to adjust the cutoff frequency to the key of the track, which you can find with Rekordbox, a free music library organizer)