It doesn't bring enough value to offset ludicrously heavy it is, unless you're using it primarily for finishing (color grading, basically). I'm going to keep Fusion Studio and ditch Resolve for editing. Fusion 17 is a complete night and day experience. I upgraded to a new Desktop, and Resolve Studio makes it feel like a waste of money, IMO. Fusion 17 Studio is like 5x faster than Fusion in Resolve. If you upgrade to Resolve Studio (Activation Code), you can run Fusion 17 alongside Resolve on both PCs you install Resolve on (it will use the same Activation Code). You can use Fusion 9 Free and import comps to Resolve. Fusion is the biggest "hurt" as a result of that. This is not a big deal with Audio, as most of the impacts are felt on aspects of the software that have to render video and effects. It's a finishing platforom with Editing, Compositing, and Audio layered on top of it. IMO, Fusion-in-Resolve is throttled back in performance by Resolve's architecture.
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