Pluraleyes 31 Exclusive 【Tested】

Previous versions relied on audio waveform matching. If your camera audio was too quiet or distorted, sync failed. Version 31 introduces the . Using AI, it analyzes lip movements, ambient lighting changes, and even electromagnetic interference from the camera sensor to create a sync map. It no longer needs perfect audio to work. In our exclusive tests, PluralEyes 31 successfully synced silent footage (no scratch track) using only visual lip movement detection.

To use the standalone version of PluralEyes 3.1, editors follow a straightforward, four-step process: pluraleyes 3 - Photography Bay

PluralEyes 3.1 introduced several "exclusive" workflow enhancements that set it apart from previous versions and competitors at the time:

: The 3.1 interface featured a large timeline where users could watch the sync happen in real-time. This visual representation allowed editors to see exactly where clips were being aligned and quickly identify any potential problem areas. The "Test & Tweak" Quality Control Suite pluraleyes 31 exclusive

Specialized Master Track workflow.

The journey of PluralEyes is a timeline of innovation that redefined post-production workflows:

The reason for PluralEyes' move to maintenance mode is simple: its revolutionary features have become standard. Most modern NLEs—including Adobe Premiere Pro, Final Cut Pro X, and DaVinci Resolve—now include native waveform syncing that rivals the core functionality PluralEyes pioneered. What This Means for Users Today Previous versions relied on audio waveform matching

It pays for itself immediately by removing hours of manual, repetitive work.

Step 1: Export Project Timeline as XML/AAF from NLE (Premiere, Avid, FCP) │ ▼ Step 2: Import XML/AAF file into PluralEyes Standalone Application │ ▼ Step 3: Click "Synchronize" -> Watch Waveforms Align Globally │ ▼ Step 4: Export Synced Timeline back to NLE to begin Editing

PluralEyes 3.1 is an incremental update in the 3.x line; it retained core sync functionality while improving stability and performance over earlier 3.0 releases. If you need features introduced in later major versions (e.g., deeper NLE integration, newer export formats), consider checking newer releases from Maxon/Red Giant. Using AI, it analyzes lip movements, ambient lighting

PluralEyes, the pioneering automated audio-syncing software developed by Singular Software and acquired by Red Giant, was officially moved into limited maintenance mode by Maxon in 2023. Following years of development culminating in version 4, the software was discontinued due to the adoption of native, high-performance waveform syncing tools within modern editing suites like Premiere Pro and DaVinci Resolve. Legacy installers remain available to current license holders through Maxon's support portal.

Before the 3.x generation, PluralEyes operated as a background utility—a simple, minimalist import/export window that required users to configure everything inside their non-linear editor (NLE) first.

The was a pivotal moment in the history of Red Giant's flagship sync tool. By focusing on workflow bottlenecks—specifically music video synchronization and Avid Media Composer integration—3.1 made the tool more reliable and versatile. Even as later versions (4.0 and beyond) continued to evolve, the enhancements introduced in 3.1 solidified its place in the toolkits of professional filmmakers.

PluralEyes was officially discontinued by Maxon on February 1, 2024