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.
| 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
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: