Excuse me in advance if im missing anything major, please correct me but I am pretty sure this is some valuable info which I helped someone out with in the past:
There are multiple sorts of software, very diverse in their core actually, with of-course similar functions that work with the usual .avi/
.mp4/
.wmv file types that most editing software uses.
Most important however is the codec (which is recommended to be .h264, perhaps even .h265 shortly or Lossless), which is the one that makes the files big(ger) and smal(ler).
For example, if your using the same
bit rate, 6 Target, 8 Max( referred to as sort of a Megabite per second ) for 2 of the same videos, but 1 of them uses the avi file type and the other .mp4 you would commonly find that .AVI creates much bigger file sizes from my own experience over the years.
Now lets assume you are recording and exporting in Coded h264 and file type .mp4:
Most commonly used recording software for gaming to my knowledge:
Note: As for which program is ''best'' I can only give my own opinion, cause theres so much different variables that may ultimately decide your personal choice.Fraps (Supports Multi-Track, Performance Affecting, Watermark @ Trial)
Dxtory( Supports Multi-Track, Performance Affecting)
Shadowplay( Least performance affecting, Free, NO Multi-Track
Mirillis Action!( Supports Multi-Track, Minor Performance Affecting, Watermark @ trial)Open Broadcast Software (For streaming & Recording, GPU heavy)
Credits to Egedi for OBS reminder As for Shadowplay and its missing Multi-Track option, I found a tutorial that creates this option, but its not as good as a integrated
one: Tutorial
HERE.Recording Software:I have used many different editing suites in my time as a video/motion editor and these are the ones that are most easy to get into for gaming related content. Some of these have free trials, non-commercial licenses or are not free at all.More Advanced:Adobe Premiere Pro( works well with other Adobe applications )
Sony Vegas Pro ( Works well with all kinds of file types that other apps cant open )
Final Cut Pro ( comparable to Premiere Pro, mostly used by Apple users)Basic software:
Windows Movie Maker (Windows)
iMovie(
Apple)
I do NOT recommend any of the basic software, because as you mentioned, you are using multi tracks and codecs, and I think these two programs are shit with both of them. They function for the absolute basics, and I quickly find myself annoyed by their limited functionality.Hope I helped