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AppleAppsAR/VR/MRComputingCreators

New DaVinci Resolve update enables end-to-end Apple Immersive Video production

DaVinci Resolve Studio adds an “immersive” viewer so you can edit Apple Spatial Video without leaving your timeline — and without needing a headset on your face the whole time.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Aug 12, 2025, 7:55 AM EDT
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DaVinci Resolve Studio
Image: Blackmagic Design
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Blackmagic Design’s DaVinci Resolve has quietly been inching toward immersive workflows for a while, but the 20.1 point release turns that nudge into a full-blown push for creators who want to make and deliver Apple-format spatial video. The Studio release brings a new immersive video viewer that lets editors pan, tilt and roll stereoscopic clips on a normal 2D monitor, plus direct streaming to an Apple Vision Pro for on-device review. Blackmagic positions the update as an end-to-end toolset for immersive projects — edit, grade, add VFX, mix spatial audio and export for Vision Pro — all inside one app.

Spatial or “immersive” video is the awkward, beautiful child of 360 video, stereoscopic 3D and cinematic craft: it promises depth, scale and positional audio, but historically it’s been maddeningly expensive and tool-chain heavy. Apple’s Vision Pro and its Apple Immersive Video format changed the equation by providing a mass-market device and a standardized container / playback pathway, but for a while the capture and post workflows remained a hurdle. Blackmagic’s strategy is simple: make the post side as familiar as possible. Instead of forcing editors into bespoke tool chains, Resolve 20.1 treats immersive clips like “just another media” on the Edit page and gives you immersive-aware versions of color, Fusion (VFX) and Fairlight (audio) tools.

What’s new

Here are the headline features you’ll actually use on a job:

  • Immersive video viewer: see immersive footage as LatLong or viewport and scrub around the frame on a regular monitor; frame and composition tools let you adjust the view without needing the headset constantly.
  • Stream to Vision Pro: preview edits and spatial audio on an actual Vision Pro for final creative decisions and client review.
  • 3D palette upgrades (Edge Mask, etc.): tools that let you mask or remove unwanted items at the edge of an immersive lens — think boom mics or rigging — and tweak the field of view so the patching isn’t obvious. That immersive patcher flattens lens space for painting or graphics, then converts back to lens space to composite correctly.
  • Spatial audio editor improvements: updated Fairlight support for Apple Spatial Audio so your mixes stay spatially accurate when played back on Vision Pro.

Blackmagic is explicit that these Apple Immersive Video workflow tools live in DaVinci Resolve Studio — the paid edition — and not in the free build. Studio 20.1 is a paid upgrade and is sold as a $295 one-time license from Blackmagic.

This update is part of a larger push: Blackmagic also built a camera aimed squarely at immersive capture. The URSA Cine Immersive is a high-end, stereoscopic camera that Blackmagic priced for pros; when it was announced late in 2024, it came in around the $30,000 mark. That camera’s raw files are playable in Resolve’s pipeline, which closes the loop from capture to Vision Pro delivery. For productions that can justify the cost, the result is a single-vendor path that’s far simpler than stitching together disparate tools.

For now, Apple’s Final Cut Pro remains the other big player with explicit support for Apple’s spatial video workflow — largely because Apple controls both the platform and the format. But Resolve staking serious claims here matters: Blackmagic’s toolset is mature across color, VFX and audio, and many shops already use Resolve as their central post app. That means teams that previously shied away from immersive work because of tool complexity may now give it a second look. Expect side-by-side conversations about pipeline (Final Cut’s Vision Pro tightness vs Resolve’s cross-discipline power) to pick up steam in post houses.

So what does this mean for creators?

Short answer: lower friction. Long answer: immersive projects still require a heady mix of camera know-how, capture discipline and attention to delivery specs, but software no longer needs to be the blocker. If you’re a colorist who’s been nervous about stereoscopic math, or an editor who hates exporting convoluted proxies to see camera-space results, Resolve 20.1 reduces those pain points. It’s also a smart move commercially for Blackmagic — giving pros a one-time $295 way into Apple Immersive Video could accelerate content availability for Vision Pro, which in turn makes the platform more compelling to consumers.

Caveats and the adoption timeline

This isn’t a magic wand. The URSA Cine Immersive is an expensive option, and a lot of creators will still shoot spatial video on iPhones or smaller rigs that feed into slightly different workflows. Also, while Resolve’s streaming to Vision Pro is convenient, a full creative review in headset is still a different experience than a 2D pass — you’ll want to test deliverables on the actual device before you lock a project. Finally, wider adoption depends on production budgets, distribution demand and whether more affordable capture tools appear.

DaVinci Resolve Studio 20.1 narrows the gap between conventional post work and the strange new world of immersive video. By folding editing, color, VFX and spatial audio into a single, familiar app — and by enabling on-device review via Vision Pro — Blackmagic has removed a lot of the friction that kept immersive projects in the realm of research and boutique studio experiments. If you make video for a living, this release is worth prototyping with: even if you don’t own a Vision Pro, the tooling now exists to experiment with immersive storytelling without overhauling your entire pipeline.


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