> Versions 4 and 5 have reached end-of-life (EOL) status. Due to limited development resources, issues related to any version earlier than 6 will no longer be addressed.
**[Direct download link for Windows (Installer)](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/releases/download/6.0.0-beta.5/video2x-qt6-windows-amd64-installer.exe)**
- You will need to install the dependencies and set `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` for the Linux build to work. Refer to the [PKGBUILD](PKGBUILD) file to see what needs to be installed.
- Alternatively, you can build it from source. Take a look at the [Makefile](Makefile).
- 6.0.0 beta AUR package for Arch Linux (`video2x-git`).
Join our Telegram discussion group to ask any questions you have about Video2X, chat directly with the developers, or discuss about super resolution technologies and the future of Video2X in general.
The latest Windows release build based on version 4.8.1. Go to the [GUI](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki/GUI) page to see the basic usages of the GUI. Try the [mirror](https://files.k4yt3x.com/Projects/Video2X/latest) if you can't download releases directly from GitHub.
You can use Video2X on [Google Colab](https://colab.research.google.com/) **for free** if you don't have a powerful GPU of your own. You can borrow a powerful GPU (Tesla K80, T4, P4, or P100) on Google's server for free for a maximum of 12 hours per session. **Please use the free resource fairly** and do not create sessions back-to-back and run upscaling 24/7. This might result in you getting banned. You can get [Colab Pro/Pro+](https://colab.research.google.com/signup/pricing) if you'd like to use better GPUs and get longer runtimes. Usage instructions are embedded in the [Colab Notebook](https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1gWEwcA9y57EsxwOjmLNmNMXPsafw0kGo).
Video2X container images are available on the GitHub Container Registry for easy deployment on Linux and macOS. If you already have Docker/Podman installed, only one command is needed to start upscaling a video. For more information on how to use Video2X's Docker image, please refer to the [documentations](https://github.com/K4YT3X/video2x/wiki/Container).
Video2X's documentations are hosted on this repository's [Wiki page](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki). It includes comprehensive explanations for how to use the [GUI](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki/GUI), the [CLI](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki/CLI), the [container image](https://github.com/K4YT3X/video2x/wiki/Container), the [library](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki/Library), and more. The Wiki is open to edits by the community, so you, yes you, can also correct errors or add new contents to the documentations.
Video2X is a video/GIF/image upscaling and frame interpolation software written in Python. It can use these following state-of-the-art algorithms to increase the resolution and frame rate of your video/GIF/image. More information about the algorithms that it supports can be found in [the documentations](https://github.com/k4yt3x/video2x/wiki/Algorithms).
- [Dandere2x](https://github.com/CardinalPanda/dandere2x): A lossy video upscaler also built around `waifu2x`, but with video compression techniques to shorten the time needed to process a video.
- [Waifu2x-Extension-GUI](https://github.com/AaronFeng753/Waifu2x-Extension-GUI): A similar project that focuses more and only on building a better graphical user interface. It is built using C++ and Qt5, and currently only supports the Windows platform.