And did it work fully?
Not really. Pretty straightforward—add file, run repair, preview. I initially tried the demo to check if it could actually fix my file.
That sounds promising. Was it complicated to use?
<p class=”isSelectedEnd”>Yeah, that method is called advanced repair. I’ve seen people recover drone footage using it too.</p>
<p class=”isSelectedEnd”>You basically provide another video recorded on the same device, and the tool uses it to rebuild the corrupted one. It worked surprisingly well for me.</p>
<p class=”isSelectedEnd”>Oh interesting, how does that sample thing work?</p>
Agree. Basic fixes won’t work if the metadata or structure is damaged. I once used a dedicated video repair tool for a client project—it reconstructed the file using a sample video.
<p class=”isSelectedEnd”>That explains it. The file probably didn’t finalize properly. You might need a proper repair tool for that.</p>
Now that you mention it, my phone did shut down while recording. That might be the reason.
If it’s an important video, I’d avoid random converters. They often can’t handle serious corruption. Was the recording interrupted or battery drained during capture?
Yeah, I tried a couple of those online tools, but they either failed or reduced the quality badly.
Did you try converting it using any online converter? Sometimes that fixes minor issues.
Sounds like file corruption. I had a similar issue with some DSLR footage. In my case, the file size looked fine but the content was unreadable.
VLC tries to play it but the video is all distorted and there’s no audio. Tried re-downloading it from my phone too, same issue.
Yeah, the preview showed the repaired video clearly, so I went ahead with the paid version. Got my full video back without quality loss.