Adobe Dxv Plugins -

Probably not. Adobe is focused on proprietary codecs (ProRes, CineForm) and streaming codecs (H.264/H.265). The VJ community is a niche market. Therefore, mastering the Adobe DXV plugin ecosystem—whether through the official Resolume installer, Autokroma AfterCodecs, or a converter like Alley—remains essential.

  • Proxy workflows:
  • Collaboration:
  • Monitoring and telemetry:
  • | Problem | Cause | Solution | |---------|-------|----------| | DXV not showing in codec list | Codec pack missing or 32‑bit QuickTime conflict | Reinstall Resolume drivers; on Windows, ensure QuickTime is NOT installed (use DirectShow instead) | | Alpha channel turns black in Premiere | You exported DXV Normal instead of Alpha | Re‑render with DXV 3 Alpha | | After Effects crashes on DXV export | AE trying to use software encoding | Go to Preferences → Display → enable hardware accelerated decoding | | Choppy playback in Premiere | DXV relies on GPU; old drivers | Update GPU drivers; set Mercury Playback to GPU acceleration | | Huge file size | You used DXV High unnecessarily | Switch to DXV Normal or re‑compress with Alley | adobe dxv plugins


    While not strictly a "DXV-only" plugin, AfterCodecs is the most powerful replacement for Adobe’s native export window. It supports DXV 3 Normal and DXV 3 Alpha natively within After Effects and Premiere Pro. Probably not

  • Precision:
  • Alpha handling:
  • Metadata passthrough:
  • While DXV is baked into VDMX and Resolume Arena, content must be created first. This is where the Adobe DXV Plugins come in. Vidvox provides a free plugin suite that integrates DXV export directly into the Adobe workflow. Proxy workflows:

    Supported Applications: