Smartphone Video Editors Apps
CapCut v8.5.0
KineMaster v8.1.6
About Video Editors
Video editing software ranges from simple trim-and-join tools to timeline editors with multiple tracks, transitions, colour grading, and effects. The first thing to settle is which end of that range your project needs, because a heavy editor used for a quick trim wastes both learning time and system resources.
For straightforward jobs — cutting a clip, joining a few segments, adding a title — a light editor does the work quickly and is easy to pick up. Multitrack editors come into their own when a project layers video, audio, captions, and effects, and when precise control over each matters. That control comes with a real learning curve.
Video editing is one of the more demanding things a computer does. Editing leans on memory and a fast drive; the export, where the finished timeline is rendered into a single file, leans on the processor and increasingly on the graphics card. A long high-resolution project can take a while to render, and that time scales with resolution and effects.
Two practical notes round this out. Working from a fast drive with plenty of free space makes editing far smoother than it is from a crowded or slow disk. And check that an editor exports the format and resolution you need before building a project around it. Some listings here cover narrower tools, such as subtitle editors, that solve one part of the process.

