![]() ![]() The Premium edition (on offer at £79.99 right now) adds advanced effect packs from NewBlue, digieffects, and ProDAD. It retails at £89.99 normally, but is currently on offer at the Magix website for £49.99 (as an anniversary special). The Plus edition, which we’re reviewing here, adds those capabilities, while also upping the track limit to 99. It's limited to 32 tracks, and lacks the higher-end packages multi-cam support and advanced colour correction. Three editions of Movie Edit Pro suit different users' needs: The base edition (currently £39.99) is geared toward beginners who want wizards that automatically create their productions. A trial version of the program delivers full functionality for 30 days, after which you can pay for a license and activate the app without having to reinstall. Mac users, as is the case with many pro-sumer-level video applications, are out of luck. A separate free Windows 8 new-style app called Movie Edit Touch is also available. Movie Edit Pro (not to be confused with Magix's actual pro-level software, Video Pro X5) installs on Windows 8, 7, Vista, and XP. Nevertheless, Movie Edit Pro is a capable and mostly intuitive enthusiast-level video editing app. ![]() Previously, the software has been a leader in introducing 3D video editing to consumers, but it's fallen behind the competition such as Adobe Premiere Elements, Corel VideoStudio, and CyberLink PowerDirector, in terms of offering any really forward-looking new features like support for 4K footage. ![]()
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