Pluraleyes 3.1 Portable · Direct & Verified

A new automation feature that quickly imports and organizes clips by figuring out their relationships as "Takes". Standalone Timeline:

Place all your video clips on the timeline in the order they were shot. Put your external audio on a separate track at the beginning of the timeline.

⚠️ PluralEyes was discontinued by Maxon in 2023. If you encounter bugs with newer operating systems, you may need to use the legacy "PluralEyes 4" or the built-in sync tools in Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve. If you'd like, I can: Pluraleyes 3.1

PluralEyes 3.1 is an update to the audio/video synchronization software originally developed by Red Giant (now part of

Before 3.1, you had to sync first, then build a multicam sequence. After 3.1, PluralEyes did both. You could feed it three GoPros, a DSLR, and a Zoom recorder. It would not only align them, but export a fully built, ready-to-cut multicam timeline. For wedding videographers shooting a ceremony with four cameras and no timecode, this turned a 3-hour post-production chore into a 10-minute coffee break. A new automation feature that quickly imports and

For those of us who spent hours looking at waveform peaks, sliding clips frame-by-frame, the "Sync Complete" chime of was the sound of freedom. While the rest of the world chases cloud-based AI, a quiet army of editors keeps version 3.1 installed on their "offline beast" machines.

Many editors maintain a dedicated offline editing workstation running older OS versions (Windows 7/8 or macOS Mojave/Catalina). Newer software subscriptions often drop support for these stable machines. PluralEyes 3.1 (perpetual license) runs flawlessly on older hardware where Creative Cloud stutters. ⚠️ PluralEyes was discontinued by Maxon in 2023

You could throw your camera audio (wind noise, distant traffic) and your lavalier audio (crystal clear) at it, hit a button, and walk away. No clapboard. No manual zooming. Just the quiet, satisfying click of a timeline that finally made sense.