Sony — Vegas Pro 10 -32 64 Bits--english- -vers...

With the 3D TV boom in 2010, Vegas Pro 10 offered native stereoscopic 3D editing. You could import left/right eye footage, align shots, adjust parallax, and output in side-by-side, over-under, or anaglyph formats.

Sony Vegas Pro 10 – 32/64 bits – English version remains a reliable piece of software history. For modern professional work, its codec support and stability lag behind. But for retro projects, teaching video editing, or running on modest hardware, it’s a gem.

The 64-bit version, in particular, was ahead of its time—proving that Sony understood the future needed more RAM and GPU power. Meanwhile, the 32-bit option gave life to older systems and plugin ecosystems. Sony Vegas Pro 10 -32 64 bits--English- -Vers...

If you find a legitimate copy, keep it. Just remember to install the latest build (10.0e) and always run it on a compatible OS (Windows 7 or 8.1 for best results). For Windows 10/11, expect compatibility issues unless you run in compatibility mode.

Final verdict: A classic for archives and hobbyists, but not for daily 4K editing. With the 3D TV boom in 2010, Vegas


Sony no longer sells or supports Vegas Pro 10, but legitimate copies may be found via archive sites, old retail discs (e.g., boxed versions from 2011), or through third-party marketplaces. Note: Always verify the integrity of old installers—viruses are common with abandonware.

Vegas Pro 10 remains a favorite for users who need stability + classic workflow without the subscription model of newer versions. While it lacks modern codecs (H.265, ProRes RAW), it handles AVC, MP4, MOV, MXF, and WMV excellently. Sony no longer sells or supports Vegas Pro

For help: Search the Vegas Creative Software forums or VideoHelp.com – many active threads still exist for version 10.


Last tested on: Windows 10 Pro (64-bit) with compatibility mode set to Windows 7.