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Sony Vegas — Pro 18

It also adopted . This is professional jargon meaning that editors could finally work in a high-dynamic-range color space (HDR10, HLG) without the footage looking washed out. For creators shooting on Blackmagic, RED, or high-end Sony cameras (A7S III), Vegas Pro 18 became a viable option. Performance: The GPU Revolution The single largest complaint about Sony Vegas (versions 13–17) was stability. It crashed often, especially with 4K HEVC (H.265) footage.

When discussing video editing software, few names carry the nostalgic weight of "Sony Vegas." However, since the sale to German company MAGIX in 2016, the software has undergone a significant evolution. Released in 2020, Vegas Pro 18 represents a pivotal moment in that timeline. It is the version where MAGIX stopped trying to simply "port" the old Sony code and began fully integrating AI-driven tools and modern color science. sony vegas pro 18

Here is an in-depth look at what Vegas Pro 18 offered, who it was for, and whether it remains relevant today. For long-time users, Vegas Pro 18 looks comfortingly familiar. It retains the infinite, non-track-limited timeline that made Sony Vegas famous. You can drop a video on track 200 without rendering track 199 first—a flexibility that Adobe Premiere Pro still struggles to mimic natively. It also adopted