WARNING - This site is for adults only!
This web site contains sexually explicit material:By Michael Tran | Senior Video Editing Analyst
| Feature | Current Vegas Pro 21 | Ideal “Vegas Pro 70” | |--------|----------------------|----------------------| | | Crashes ~1-2x per day on complex projects | Zero crashes in 100-hour stress test | | Rendering speed | Good (NVENC support), but slower than Resolve on same hardware | 2x faster with background rendering | | Audio workflow | Excellent (full VST3, Sound Forge integration) | AI stem splitting & Dolby Atmos mixing | | Color grading | Basic (LUTs, limited wheels) | DaVinci-level color page with HDR scopes | | Motion tracking | Rudimentary point tracker | AI mask tracking with Mocha integration | | Plugin support | OFX but buggy with Resolve plugins | Full OFX, AU, and VST3 with sandboxing | sony vegas pro 70 better
If Magix listens to this wishlist and delivers a version 22 or 23 with native RAW, AI masking, and cloud collaboration, they might finally create the editor that old-school Sony fans have been dreaming of—and that new creators would actually prefer over Adobe or Blackmagic. By Michael Tran | Senior Video Editing Analyst
In the world of non-linear video editing (NLE), few names carry as much weight as Vegas Pro. Originally developed by Sonic Foundry, then perfected under Sony, and now owned by Magix, the software has evolved through dozens of iterations. But a new term is buzzing in forums and YouTube comments: But a new term is buzzing in forums and YouTube comments: