Skip to main content

GoPro launches revamped Quik app, no action camera required

GoPro: Introducing Quik | Curate, Create, Relive

GoPro has launched a revamped version of its Quik app that folks without one of its action cameras can also use.

The original Quik app landed in 2016 but has been neglected by GoPro for a while now. The new version retains the old app’s auto-edit smarts but also adds a bunch of new features that it hopes will entice smartphone owners who have a ton of photos and videos on their devices.

Quik makes it easy to create music-synced highlight videos from smartphone and action camera footage because it does all the work for you. All you have to do is select the photos and footage that you want to include, along with a music track from the app’s royalty-free offerings, or one from your own library.

To refine the look of the final video, you can adjust exposure, contrast, color, and vibrancy. For a faster solution, simply select one of Quik’s many filters as an overlay.

A notable addition to the new app is a tool that lets you speed up or slow down any part of a clip — check out the video at the top of this page to see what we’re talking about.

go pro quik app
GoPro

Additional features include frame grabbing that lets you extract still images from your footage, and easy social sharing so you can quickly post your finished highlight videos to popular sites.

When firing up the app for the first time, users are recommended to dive into their photos app and share their favorite shots and videos with Quik, where they’ll become part of the app’s private “Mural” feed that’s used to create the highlight videos.

Once that initial work is done, you can share future “keepers” in a couple of taps right after you’ve shot them, sending them straight to the Mural.

If you share multiple photos or videos at once to Quik, they’ll be grouped together as an event and the app will produce a compilation highlight video beat-synced to music, which you can then tweak using the aforementioned editing tools.

“Quik makes it simple and fun to finally make sense of the vast number of photos and videos we all have on our phones,” GoPro founder and CEO Nick Woodman said in a release. “You don’t even have to open the Quik app to organize your images — simply share your favorite shots directly to Quik from your camera roll, text threads, or wherever your best shots may be. We named it Quik because that’s what it is!”

The basic version of Quik is free, but if you want to unlock its full capabilities (eg. unlimited Mural imports, multi-clip edits of non-GoPro content, unlimited access to all features and tools), you’ll have to pay $2 per month or $10 annually. Incoming features as part of the paid version include unlimited photo and video backups at their original quality to the cloud. Current GoPro subscribers can access Quik’s premium features at no extra cost.

Of course, Apple’s own Photos app and Google Photos, among others, can also automatically create videos from a phone’s photos and footage, so whether Quik is strong enough to persuade people to pay for it remains to be seen.

Quik is available now for Android and iOS devices.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
I tried to replace my GoPro with this new phone and its clever camera
The Asus Zenfone 10, along with the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra, Apple iPhone 14 Pro, and the GoPro Hero 11 Black.

The Asus Zenfone 10's camera is attached to a gimbal, and with it comes the promise of shooting steady, shake-free video even when you’re moving around.

Does this mean it can take on the mighty GoPro, and perhaps mean you only need to carry around one device instead of two? To find out, we put the Zenfone 10 against the latest GoPro camera and two of its smartphone peers.
Understanding the Zenfone 10’s gimbal
The gimbal can be seen working in the viewfinder Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Read more
I put the iPhone’s Dynamic Island on my Pixel 7 Pro — and I can’t go back
The expanded DynamicSpot Dynamic Island at the top of the Pixel 7 Pro.

The Apple iPhone 14 Pro got a big refresh last year, and key to that was a new selfie camera design with a pill-shaped cutout. Only, this is no normal hole -- it's the home of a new feature, the oddly-named "Dynamic Island." It's a notification bubble that lives behind the selfie camera that displays information like music tracks, timers, and anything else you need to know, but don't need a full screen for. If you're playing music on Spotify, it'll display the track name and controls. If someone calls you, it'll show the person's contact information. Waiting for an Uber? It'll show you how far away it is. It's even tied into the Face ID unlock process. It's a great use of the selfie camera — and one with a bright future.

At least, that's what we thought. The Dynamic Island has had a tough start, as app support was extremely limited, meaning it didn't live up to Apple's promises. This persisted for a number of months before the Dynamic Island finally got what it needed to live up to its hype.

Read more
You aren’t ready for this Galaxy S23 vs. iPhone 14 Pro camera test
Deep purple iPhone 14 Pro and Cream Galaxy S23 crossed over

Samsung’s Galaxy S23 is here, and it's quickly become one of the best phones you can buy in 2023. For $800, you’re getting a small but mighty phone with Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy chipset, long-lasting battery life, and a powerful triple lens camera system with a 50-megapixel main shooter.

But how does one of the best Android phones stack up against Apple’s smallest flagship, the iPhone 14 Pro? It has just as many cameras as the Galaxy S23, a powerful 48MP main camera, and costs $200 more than Samsung's handset.

Read more