When comparing Lightworks vs Wondershare Filmora, the Slant community recommends Lightworks for most people. In the question“What are the best video editors for Linux?” Lightworks is ranked 11th while Wondershare Filmora is ranked 13th. The most important reason people chose Lightworks is:
Lightworks has been used to edit movies such as Wolf of Wall Street, 28 Days Later, Pulp Fiction, The King's Speech and many, many others.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Hollywood approved
Lightworks has been used to edit movies such as Wolf of Wall Street, 28 Days Later, Pulp Fiction, The King's Speech and many, many others.
Pro Highly polished editing workflow
Lightworks is very focused on just the editing workflow. It's full of functionality that eases the workflow. For example, media manager can be used to storyboard, "mark and park" can be used in timelines, cut points can be adjusted in 3 ways (end point of a clip without adjusting the start point of a clip that comes before it, start point of a clip without adjusting the endpoint of a clip that comes after it or start and end points of 2 joined clips at the same time) without shortcuts, just intuitively placed mouse hover points around the cut point. Such attention to detail is what makes it an efficient tool for editing.
Cons
Con Free version is limited to 720p output
Whereas the full version can export to a wide variety of formats and resolutions, Lightworks can only export H.264 / MPEG-4 up to 720p.
Con Doesn't support multi-frame rate videos
Unlike the other video editor, this one doesn't support multi-frame rate video.
Con Multiple video tracks not supported
Con Doesn't support selected media length
It cannot view media length.
Con Doesn't load resource when project is loaded
Con Preview freeze on splitting clip
You cannot preview after split clip.
Con Transition not customizable
You cannot customize transition such as duration.