Grab and extract the All-in-One archive from https://github.com/eko5624/mpv-win64/releases
You can also manually install these pacman-based packages if you are using MSYS2
All my builds are portable and compiled with VapourSynth support, these plugins will have no effect if MPV can't find python environment
If you have vulkan-1.dll on your OS, mpv will use it from your graphic driver automatically. In this case, vulkan-1.dll can be removed.
https://mpv.io/manual/
All your configurations can be saved within the portable_config subdirectory
- SVP proprietary motion interpolation solution to produce high frame rate video
- MVTools another motion interpolation plugin and it was open source
- FFMS2 video source library for multimedia editing
Fork this repo and build these packages by Github Action
NOTICE
Don't build it on your personal msys2 environment unless it was in sandbox, these shitty scripts will spoil your whole weekend!
The FFmpeg and MPV library were built with the following libraries
- lame: MP3 Audio Encoding
- libogg/libvorbis-aotuv: Ogg Vorbis Audio Encoding
- opus: Opus Audio Encoding
- nvcodec: Nvidia Hardware Accelerated video Encoding/Decoding
- lcms2: Reading ICC Profiles for Your Monitor
- libass/freetype2/fribidi/harfbuzz: Subtitle Support
- luajit: Lua Plugin
- vapoursynth: VapourSynth Plugin and VSS Video Source
- shaderc/spirv/libplacebo: D3D11 & Vulkan Context
- libbluray/libdvdnav/libdvdread/libdvdcss: Parsing BD/DVD
- libdav1d: av1 decoding
- libjxl: jxl decoding
I prefer to directly use these utilities
Yes, fdk aak produce better aac than FFmpeg native, but it is still not in the top tier. I recommend you to use xHE-AAC or Apple AAC instead
Fontconfig sucks in windows, and... do you really want to learn it?