If you are a professional editor who touches multi-camera or double-system audio more than twice a month, buy PluralEyes. It’s not glamorous, it’s not flashy, but it is the ultimate unsung hero of post-production workflow. If you’re a YouTuber with one camera and one mic, stick with Premiere’s built-in tools.
4.5/5
Title: From Sync Nightmares to Seamless Timelines: Is PluralEyes Still a Must-Have for Premiere Pro in 2024? how to use pluraleyes in premiere pro
(Deducting half a star because the subscription model hurts, and the interface inside Premiere can sometimes feel laggy on large projects.) If you are a professional editor who touches
The how-to is deceptively simple (add media > sync > replace audio), but the why is profound: . PluralEyes turns a 45-minute manual sync job into a 2-minute coffee break. The drift correction alone has saved me from re-syncing interviews that slowly fell out of phase over an hour. The drift correction alone has saved me from
Enter by Red Giant (now part of Maxon). For years, this tool has been the gold standard for automatic audio sync. But with Premiere Pro now offering built-in synchronization (via “Create Multi-Camera Source Sequence” or “Synchronize”), does PluralEyes still earn its keep? After using it extensively on a 3-camera, 12-audio-track interview project last week, here is my honest, deep-dive review on how to use it and why you might still need it. Part 1: First Impressions & Installation PluralEyes doesn’t run as a standalone application anymore (though a standalone version exists, the Premiere Pro workflow is the focus). Instead, it installs as an extension panel inside Premiere Pro. You’ll find it under Window > Extensions > PluralEyes .