Shareware Video Players Apps

6
Programs

Showing 1–6 of 6

QuickTime

QuickTime v2024

39.9 MB · Free · 14,092 downloads
QuickTime is an Apple multimedia player supporting various formats with editing features and live streaming.
4.3 7
Get
MediaMonkey

MediaMonkey v2024.2.2.3222

15.5 MB · Free · 11,885 downloads
MediaMonkey manages, plays, and syncs your audio collection with smart organization and streaming features.
4.5 11
Get
RealPlayer

RealPlayer v25.0.1.307

62.2 MB · Free · 10,816 downloads
Launched first in 1995 RealPlayer is a high-quality multimedia player for both videos and audios. It was one…
5.0 1
Get
Zoom Player

Zoom Player v2024

29.6 MB · Free · 9,417 downloads
Free and paid Windows media player that supports numerous formats, virtual drive mounting, IPTV/YouTube streaming, and a fully…
4.0 1
Get
PowerDVD

PowerDVD v2023

216 MB · Free · 8,170 downloads
Cyberlink PowerDVD is considerably one of the world's best media application for photos, video and audio. Due to…
5.0 1
Get
JRiver Media Center

JRiver Media Center v35.0.74

33.0 MB · Free · 6,782 downloads
JRiver Media Center manages digital music libraries with high-quality audio processing and streaming features.
3.0 1
Get

About Video Players

A video player's main job is simple — open a file and play it — but the players differ in how widely they handle formats, how light they are on the system, and what extras they wrap around playback. The good news is that a modern player carries its own decoders, so it opens almost anything without separate codec installs.

That self-contained design is the practical reason to keep a capable player on hand. When a file refuses to play, or plays with sound but no image, switching players is usually faster than diagnosing a codec problem. A well-built player simply handles the format internally and gets on with it.

Beyond raw playback, players vary in character. Some are deliberately minimal — small, fast, and quick to open, which suits an older or low-powered machine. Others add subtitle handling, playlists, audio adjustment, streaming support, and fine control over video output. Media Player Classic sits at the lightweight end of that scale.

The right choice depends on how you watch. For occasional viewing, almost any current player is fine and the default settings work. For a large or unusual collection — high-resolution video, many subtitle tracks, less common formats — a player with deeper options earns its place. Ordinary playback needs little hardware; very high-resolution video is the one case where a faster machine helps.