Let’s be honest: If you started editing video in the last three years, you probably take auto-sync for granted. You drag a clip and a WAV file into Premiere Pro or DaVinci Resolve, right-click, and magically, they line up. But for those of us who were cutting footage a decade ago, we remember the before times .
If you own a perpetual license for 4.1.1, you hold a piece of software history that still works perfectly for 90% of DSLR workflows. Yes, if: You are editing on older hardware (circa 2016-2019) and don't want to upgrade your OS just to pay Adobe $20/month for a feature you already own.
We remember PluralEyes.
However, there is a cult following of editors who keep a Windows 10 or macOS Mojave virtual machine running specifically for PluralEyes 4.1.1. Why? Because they don't want a subscription.
You use Resolve (whose built-in sync is now better) or need RAW audio support (PluralEyes 4.x struggles with 32-bit float files). A Final Toast PluralEyes 4.1.1 was the safety net for thousands of wedding videographers, indie filmmakers, and YouTubers who couldn't afford a sound mixer. It turned a 3-hour manual sync job into a coffee break. Red Giant PluralEyes 4.1.1
We pour one out for Red Giant today. Long live the waveform. Long live the sync.
Today, we are taking a specific look back at a landmark release: . While the software has since been absorbed into the larger Universe subscription and eventually sunsetted, version 4.1.1 represents the peak of standalone, "one-click" audio sync technology. Let’s be honest: If you started editing video
Here is why you might want to dig that old installer out of your hard drive. Before 2021 (when Blackmagic and Adobe finally caught up), syncing scratch audio from a DSLR to high-quality WAVs from a Zoom or Tascam was a manual nightmare. You were either clapping a slate or visually lining up waveforms by zooming in until your eyes bled.