Drumagog is super flexable once you learn all it's features.
One feature that might come in handy is turning off the Dynamic Tracking setting. That means all the hits will trigger at whatever velocity you select. If you want inhuman blastbeat sounds, you can use that, or if you want more natural sounding blasts, just raise the input level and turn dynamic tracking back on until they trigger at louder volumes. Honestly, if you're smart and think logically about it, Drumagog can do almost anything you want it to.
Also normally what I do (since I track tons of lame drummers with no dynamic control) is make a send from the original snare track with drumagog on it and record to a new snare track. Then I go through each part and turn on dynamic tracking, or turn it off, or adjust thresholds or whatever I need to do, and just record each part on its own, then comp them together. May sound complicated, but once you get on a roll, its super easy.