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are shotcut and kdenlive any good video editors? just curious

i thought this question could fit here as this is a community about open source software after all, anyways.. i was gonna do editing for the first time and wanted to use something that's free and open source, i was considering either shotcut or kdenlive but i wanted to at least hear the community's opinion about it, i'll be waiting for the replies. thanks

20 comments
  • To my knowledge Kdenlive is generally regarded as one of the best video editors. Iirc one of the few things said to be holding it back from being the best on Linux was bad/no hardware accelleration or something like that.

  • Shotcut is great if you never dived into video editing before, simply because it's great for quick and simple video editing, it's also fairly intuitive. But it can fall flat when you have specific (or more advanced) needs, like adding subtitles or specific effects, it's doable, features are not fully the problem here...just that it can be a needless pain to use in such instances.

    Kdenlive on the other hand is more complete but less intuitive, yet if you want something a bit more advanced it will do the job more than nicely.

    So it widely depends on your needs and how far you want to delve into video editing.

    I'd say if you wanna go crazy go for Kdenlive, if you want something simple go for Shotcut. If you want to start simple and go crazy later go for both.

    They are both more than decent editing softwares, but Kdenlive is surely the best of the two, if not one of the best out there.

  • Personally I think Kdenlive has the most user-friendly interface of any video- editor (pay software included) so I think it's ideal for a newcomer. It's also fairly light on system resource comparatively.

    A few years ago, it used to have a reputation for being a bit buggy but seems to be very stable in my experience these days.

    The main problem would be the lack of guides/tutorials, though there are a few on YouTube.

  • I know you're specifically asking about FOSS, which DaVinci Resolve isn't, but it does have a fully free version that lets you export full projects up to 4k. DaVinci is a professional tool used by big productions as well as single operators like myself, that gives you a whole post-production pipeline in one single environnement separated into tabs, the learning curve was pretty good for me but I had previous experience.

20 comments