Plixel

Version shots, compare takes, leave notes, and assemble the final cut—without bouncing between tools.

Generation is only half the work. The real speed comes from reviewing takes, making clear decisions, and assembling sequences without losing context. Review & Assembly keeps versions, notes, and approvals tied to the exact shots—so you can move from “draft shots” to a coherent cut without tool-hopping.

The problem: production stalls after generation

Most creators can generate shots—but getting to a finished sequence is where momentum dies:

Scattered Takes

Takes get scattered across folders, chats, and tools

Feedback

Feedback is vague (“use the other one”) and hard to track

Why

Teams lose the “why” behind decisions

Busywork

Assembly becomes manual busywork just to see if the scene flows

What it is

Review & Assembly is Plixel’s post-generation workflow layer. It gives you a production-ready way to:

 

  • Version shots (take 1, take 2, etc.)

  • Compare takes side-by-side

  • Leave shot-specific notes and decisions

  • Assemble sequences into a cut

It’s built to keep you moving forward, not bouncing between tools just to stay organized.

What you can do inside Plixel

Version and track takes

Keep every take attached to the shot, with a clear “current selection” and history.

Compare takes fast

Side-by-side review so decisions are obvious and grounded in what you see.

Leave notes where they belong

Timestamped, shot-specific feedback that doesn’t get lost in chat threads.

Assemble sequences into a cut

Organize shots into a coherent sequence so pacing and flow can be evaluated early.

Approve and lock decisions

Know what’s final, what’s pending, and what needs another pass.

Popular questions

Is this a full replacement for professional NLE editing?

Not the goal. It’s a production workflow layer: versioning, review, and assembly so you can reach a coherent cut faster. Export to a full NLE when you need advanced finishing.

Notes and versions stay attached to the shot, so each change is intentional and traceable.

Yes—review works best with shared context: versions, notes, and selections in one place.