![]() Certainly for free options, it's in a class of its own. All versions give you the class-leading colour grading, which is what Resolve started life doing. The free version gives you a lot of integrated goodness- the normal editing page, the speedy newer cut page, a decent sound page with all the basics covered and the Fusion page (which prefers a lot of memory/GPU, be warned). Whether you treat it as a taster for the Studio version, or stick with it as your editor, it's absolutely worth a download. However, honestly, the free version is a massively capable editor. There are a few features in the paid one which I really value- the handy auto-sync and the insanely good frame interpolation for super slow-mo are nice. I picked one up from Thomann for about £200, so I have the paid version with a little surface- no regrets. When they released the little Speed Editor control surface, they sold an introductory bundle with the Speed Editor and a Resolve Studio license, essentially for the price of a Resolve Studio license. Absolutely slays it for your average person looking to make competent videos for youtube. It's limited to a max of 4kp60 export, has fewer import/export formats, and doesn't have the fancy AI-driven features or some of the auto-syncing etc.- but it's still a very powerful and capable editor. There are two versions, the free version works, albeit with a smaller feature set. ![]() ![]() DaVinci Resolve.is *free* for individual users. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |