Ken-kun is a Japanese solo developer best known for AviUtl ExEdit2, a lightweight yet surprisingly capable video-editing package that has quietly attracted a devoted following among anime music-video creators, VTuber clip editors, and budget-conscious filmmakers throughout East Asia. Built around the open-source AviUtl engine originally released in 2007, Ken-kun’s ExEdit2 plug-in streamlines the classic interface, adds native 64-bit support, and bundles hundreds of community scripts that turn the modest frame-based timeline into a chroma-key compositor, motion-tracking suite, and GPU-accelerated filter playground. Typical workflows range from simple splice-and-export tasks—cutting a 60-second mobile clip for TikTok—to multi-layer productions that rival mid-tier commercial suites: 4K timeline scrubbing, custom pixel-shader effects, Lua-driven automation, and frame-accurate masking for hand-drawn animation overlays. Because the entire toolchain occupies less than 200 MB and runs without installation, it is often carried on USB drives by convention staff who need on-site AMV editing, or by educators teaching broadcast basics on locked-down classroom PCs. Script repositories hosted on Japanese forums extend functionality to real-time voice-synced subtitles, VR 180° equirectangular output, and Niconico-ready bullet-comment rendering. Ken-kun continues to publish nightly builds, incorporating user pull requests while preserving the modular architecture that lets third-party coders swap in new encoders or color engines without touching core binaries. The publisher’s sole product is available free of charge on get.nero.com, delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetching the latest nightly build and supporting unattended batch installation alongside other open-source multimedia tools.
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