Adobe Premiere Pro CC is a professional editing software. It will let you work with a wide variety of video sources, including 8K and 360-degree virtual reality footage. You’ll be able to handle lighting and color, graphics, and audio all within Adobe Premiere Pro, allowing you to handle your workload all in one place. When you finish editing, you’ll also have plenty of options for sharing your work with the world. You can quickly share your content on social media directly from the editor. You can even output VR-ready content to be watched back on virtual reality headsets like the Oculus Rift or HTC Vive. Final Cut Pro X will let you edit HD video content from a wide variety of sources, including phones on the lower end of the spectrum and ProRes RAW and REDCODE RAW 8K files on the higher end. This makes it an effective editor for almost anyone, regardless of which devices you’re using to record. The multi-track timeline editor should be easy to use if you’ve got some experience with video editing software. And, the software is ready to use for graphics, effects, 360-degree video, and multi-cam recordings. When you’re finished, you can export your projects directly to social media and video-sharing sites, or you can save your videos in a variety of high-resolution formats, including high dynamic range (HDR). Fortunately, the simplicity doesn’t compromise on features. There’s support for 4K video editing as well as 360-degree VR videos. Motion tracking is a first for consumer software and enables video editors to follow one specific object (person, physical object, face, etc) throughout a video cut. Want to load multiple videos into a single frame for editing? Corel can do that, too. Adding animated titles or audio to files is as easy as it gets for beginners.  Beyond the basics of non-linear video editing with a multi-track timeline, Vegas Pro 18 Edit gives you plenty of tools to make your video look more professional. You’ll be able to work on 4K video with HDR and high frame rates, stabilize shaky footage, track moving objects in a scene, and make tweaks to audio, lighting, and color. When you’re done, you’ll also get plenty of options for exporting, including the ability to save a file type compatible with other popular editing software. While Vegas Pro 18 Edit is the basic version, Vegas Pro 18 adds on a number of extra effects and editing tools for an increased price. The Vegas Pro 18 Suite adds on even more advanced tools. And, there’s also a Vegas Pro 365 subscription service that comes at a low monthly price with all of the same features of the Vegas Pro 18 package, plus a few extras.   Apple’s iMovie offers a great way to get familiar with combining video and audio files in a multi-track timeline without being inundated by features a beginner probably wouldn’t want to use. Plus, it still has options for you to create a cool video with special effects, filters, and titles. On Mac, you’ll have access to some advanced tools to help ensure your video dazzles, including tools like picture-in-picture, green screen, and color correction. When you’re done with a project, you can put it into iMovie Theatre to view on all your Apple devices. And, you can expect your video to look sharp, since iMovie supports 4K resolution exports. Lightworks gives you all the tools you need to take multiple video files and combine them together into one project. And, thanks to its wide support for different file types, you can edit together your video from plenty of different sources, whether they be from your phone, a DSLR, or even a pro-grade RED camera. You’ll also be able to use Lightworks on almost any computer you own since it can run on Windows, Mac OS X, and even Linux. All of this makes it an easy option for beginners, and you’ll have the option to stick with the software as you grow as an editor thanks to the upgrade path with a pro license. Lightworks Pro adds some usability improvements and gives you a much greater selection of file types and resolutions to use when exporting your finished project. DaVinci Resolve 17 is a complete solution for HD video editing with a multi-track timeline. But it goes well beyond that, with all the tools needed for visual effects, motion graphics, audio editing, and color correction. Getting the most out of DaVinci Resolve 17 will take some learning, as the available tools go so far beyond what most users will need early on, but that makes it a great choice for anyone hoping to grow as an editor without one day needing to switch software to keep growing. Even if you’re just doing simple editing, DaVinci Resolve 17 will let you create a great video and export it in high quality, even at 4K Ultra HD and 60 frames per second. You’ll even be able to work with HDR content. And, what makes this all the better is that you can get it on Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux. Camtasia is a multi-track editor like the others on this list, but its built-in screen recording software will make it easy for you to capture footage from your computer, and even show mouse movements and keystrokes to help viewers follow along. You can capture your computer’s audio, or even snag footage of your iOS device’s screen. You’ll also be able to record webcam footage, or simply import footage you’ve recorded, including 4K video. With screen capture, you can even easily import unsupported video files by recording their playback on your screen. Camtasia also has some extra features that can be particularly useful to educators, such as the ability to add interactive quizzes and track the students’ performance. You can get a free trial of Camtasia to see if it’s right for you, and you’ll be able to use the software on both Windows or Mac computers.