![]() ![]() In any case, it exports in inferior quality compared to image sequences, so there really wouldn't be any reason to touch it anyway. Quicktime is now defunct, so is potentially hazardous to your computer. ![]() I'll add: Do *not* install Quicktime, even if SFM says so. ![]() It might seem slightly tedious, but it's very quick once you get used to it - and SFM actually exports quicker in this mode, and you get a better trade off of quality and file size on your final video, so it's actually worth doing anyway. (Blender is used in the example above because it's free and includes a basic video editor that is suitable for the task, but many other programs will do). These render as sequences of individual frames and a separate sound file, and can be quickly and easily assembled in most video editors. Sorry in advance if I am not using the proper terminology but I have a sequence that the render bars were green after I rendered the sequence out to preview the timeline. The only reliable video export (at least until Valve decides SFM is worth their time to update again) is Image Sequences: Losing render previews in premiere pro cc 2017 Chris Wright updated 4 years, 2 months ago 4 Members I'll assume you're exporting in AVI - the AVI exporter corrupts larger/longer files when they get too large for SFM's 32-bit memory limits.
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