Now we will deal with the third track, the title track. All you have to do is cut the excess piece at the end of the Overlay track. You will notice that in the preview, two video clips are now visible.
To see the two tracks, the "Chroma Key" effect is applied simultaneously on the 3 clips by selecting all three before applying the video effect.
Repeat this a second time and your three clips will be perfectly joined on the overlay track. To prevent this, after the first clip is dropped on the overlay track, select it and press "CTRL" + C to copy and "CTRL" + V to paste the copy without touching the cursor. If done that way, it's possible that the clips won't touch each other and you'll have a flash at each point after rendering. To be sure that the 3 clips are continuous (touching together), I didn't drop the same clip on the timeline 3 times. On the overlay track I used the same clip three times with a green background (it's not necessary to use a clip with a green background, any other clip will work as well - nevertheless, you will see that the final result is better). The setup of the first video track is not critical.
What is true for Studio 10 Plus is also true for Studio 11 Plus with which this tutorial was made, and even with Studio 12, on which the tutorial was also tested. It was then possible to make multiple views with 3 videos without using Hollywood FX and without an intermediate rendering. Perez found that Studio 10 Plus accepted a video on the third track, as long as you removed the audio track from this video.