

Others go down the wizard route, as here, with the idea that you just add clips in the right order and tweak things as you go, just following your nose. The thing about video editors on any computing platform is that there's no one 'right' interface - some go down the route of a single UI that has every function under the sun apparent and with a full Non Linear Editing timeline, but there's then so many controls that the learning curve is steep.

Oh well, there's still plenty here in the main Animotica application.

Most of the panels lead to built-in functionality, but the last three are marked with a 'Recommended Download' flag and I'd though that, once downloaded, the apps behind these flags might launch seamlessly from the front end, but it seems that these three flagged apps/functions are just adverts and you always get shunted off to the Store again, which is something of a shame - I'd like to have seen the front end recognise the new installs. Think of the panels as wizards helping you achieve the various means, but often using the same rendering modules (etc.) under the hood. A HTML front end with links to various app configurations to do whatever task is needed. The initial front end is, as I say, HTML-based, which is fair enough - I've seen some PC (x86) video suites use the same trick. With this app you can easily combine video and photos together with transitions, rotate and scale video, adjust color and image, add titles and captions, stickers or custom logo with amazing animations, apply Blur Background, slow or fast video, make square video for Instagram or video for Stories, trim video, and more. Just try this Video Editor to understand how to easily create own video clip, movie or slideshow for YouTube or Instagram. It just works.Īnimotica is a simple and powerful Video Editor and Movie Maker for Windows 10. But it works for me, even when throwing in multiple elements, transitions, music, slow-mo effects, Ken Burns pans, picture colour adjustments, and so on. Admittedly, I was reviewing Animotica on the 'flagship'-specced IDOL 4 Pro - so I'd welcome data points on anyone trying this on a phone with, say, 1GB or 2GB RAM. Which you can't always say about video editors on any mobile (or even desktop) platform. However, there's also a proper editing UI and a great many trimming/merging/enhancement functions that can be applied successfully to both local and (e.g.) OneDrive-hosted photos and videos. Animotica opens to a HTML front end and the fear is that this is an online editing service with a wrapper of some kind for Windows 10.
