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TechRadar
Steve Paris

FlashBack Express screen recorder review

FlashBack Express during our review.

Having the ability to record your screen, be it to show something that’s glitching for tech support, explain a feature to someone, or just for fun, is becoming an increasingly useful and important thing to do. 

And no, using your phone to record your computer screen is far from ideal, which is why we’re taking a look at FlashBack Express from Blueberry. Is it one of the best free screen recorders around or are compromises still evident since our last review?

FlashBack Express: Pricing and plans

For free software, you have a surprisingly good number of changeable parameters (Image credit: Blueberry)
  • Free screen recorder with no watermark, only some limitations

PC-only FlashBack Express is free - and you can check it out by clicking here. However, the tool has limitations that are only lifted once you grab a Pro license. 

The Pro version is a perpetual license - no on-going subscriptions here. You pay once and you own the software.

In addition to offering one of the best screen recorders, FlashBack Pro also includes a full video editing software suite. You can add text, images, sound and video effects to your project, you’re offered more exporting options than the 720p MP4 FlashBack Express can use, and your footage won’t be crippled with watermarks either.

You purchase Pro via licenses, and the more licenses you buy, the cheaper the price for each gets. For instance, one license is usually $49, but is discounted to $39 / £33 as of this writing. Get two for $59 / £50, three for $89 / £75, and so on. Academic discounts are also available.

If you’re looking for streaming software to broadcast and record your gaming experience, neither the company's best free screen recorder Express nor Pro might be up to that task. But the developers also offer FBX for that purpose, with Free and Pro versions available.

  • Pricing: 4/5

FlashBack Express: Interface

The interface is very simple and easy to use, with most options found in that black rectangle to the left of this screenshot (Image credit: Blueberry)
  • Simple parameters, in an easy to understand interface, with some limitations

Once you’ve launched FlashBack Express, you’re graced with a very small window containing a handful of options. This is where you get to set your parameters, and you’ll find that there are a surprisingly fair number of them, for a free service.

First of all, you’ve got ‘Screen’. By default, it’s set to ‘fullscreen’. Click on that menu to choose to focus on a region of your screen, or a specific window instead. Top left of your screen (not the window), you’ll also find a menu with different size options (depending on your computer screen’s own dimensions).

Look around the edge and you’ll notice a selectable border. Click and drag on any of its handles to resize the area you’ll be capturing. It’s a very simple and hands-on approach.

We found one of the most interesting options is the Scheduling tool (Image credit: Blueberry)

Your next parameter involves your webcam. Here it’s simple: whether you have it switched on or not. This is also true of your microphone, along with a choice of devices should you have more than one connected. 'PC Audio’ is set to ‘off’, but that’s because it’s there to lure you to upgrade to the more advanced ‘Pro’ version mentioned above: Express doesn’t record your computer’s audio, save through your external microphone.

Same goes for ‘Video quality’: Express is set to 720p, so that menu is only there to entice you to go ‘Pro’, which can record at up to 4K.

You’ll find a cog wheel at the top of that small window, where the software’s settings and preferences are located, and to its left, is the ability to schedule a recording (funny how updated versions just switch the order of buttons: it used to be to its right). This is an interesting concept, and you’re offered numerous parameters, such as when to start the recording, and for how long to record. Additional features include when to repeat your scheduled recording, what to record (video, audio, or both), and what to do once the recording is completed.

  • Interface: 4/5

Blueberry FlashBack Express: Recording

Hit the record button, and after 3 seconds, you’re live - so to speak (Image credit: Blueberry)
  • Lights, camera, action - everything has to be done live

With FlashBack Express, you have no post-editing capabilities. Everything you want to see happening, you need to do it live so to speak. This obviously involves performing the right action at the right time that you wish to record, but it also applies to your webcam footage.

By default, you’ll find that video as a picture-in-picture, lower right of the interface. You can move it anywhere on the screen, and as you do so, you’ll notice you have three size options, the largest one being full screen.

If you fancy doing a two camera setup, moving from yourself to your desktop, this is something you’ll have to do during the recording process.

Otherwise, just leave it where it is, perform your actions, and stop your recording. This is done either via a keyboard shortcut, or by using the onscreen controls to the left.

  • Recording: 3/5

Blueberry FlashBack Express: Editing & exporting

Editing - if you can call it that - consists of trimming the start and end of your clip (Image credit: Blueberry)
  • No real editing, can only trim, although direct upload to YouTube is a plus

Your recordings are stored within the app itself, and to access your editing tools, you simply double-click on the one you wish to work on.

Except, calling that editing is a pretty generous way of referring to trimming. That’s right: you can trim the start and end of your recording and that’s it. This is hardly the best free video editing software we've tried. These are the only options at your disposal. At this point, you can understand why FlashBack Pro might become a tempting alternative.

When it comes to exporting, you’re able to save the file to your computer, or directly via cloud storage through your Google Drive or DropBox. If you’re satisfied with your recording, you also have the option of uploading it straight to YouTube.

  • Editing & exporting: 2/5

Should I buy?

All your clips are stored in the app’s library (Image credit: Blueberry)

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

Alternatives


For more options, we've tested the best screen recorders around.

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