Multi-monitor video player
A multi-monitor video player plays different video content on each of your screens independently, rather than stretching one video across all of them. Anemone Player does this natively on Windows: every connected display gets its own full-screen window, with its own layout and its own sources.
Independent windows, not a stretched desktop
Windows' built-in "extend" display mode treats your monitors as one big desktop — useful for dragging app windows around, but it doesn't give you independent video playback per screen. Play a video full-screen and it fills one monitor; drag it across and it just clips awkwardly across the gap between displays.
Anemone treats each monitor as its own canvas. Screen one can run a 2×2 grid of ambient video loops, screen two can show a single full-screen slideshow of images, and screen three can run something else entirely — each one independently controlled, all launched from the same app.
Common multi-monitor setups this works for
- —Home theatre / battlestation setups: ambient video or visualizers running on side monitors while you work or play on the main one.
- —Gaming rigs with a dedicated content screen: a stream, video loop, or slideshow on one monitor without interrupting whatever's on the main display.
- —Home signage-style displays: a kitchen or hallway monitor cycling through photos and clips, independent of whatever else is running in the house.
What about Windows' built-in multi-monitor options?
Windows can extend or duplicate your desktop, but neither mode gives a video player awareness of "monitor 2 should show something different from monitor 1." Most video players default to a single window on whichever screen you launched them on — getting independent playback per monitor means manually opening a separate instance for each screen and dragging every window into place, the same VLC-instance workaround used for single-screen multi-video playback. Anemone assigns a layout per monitor directly, so that setup step disappears.
Step-by-step: multi-monitor playback with Anemone Player
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1
Download and install Anemone Player
Free download for Windows — no credit card needed to start.
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2
Open the app and start your trial
Register with your email or a Google account to get a license key instantly — 30 days, full features.
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3
Pick a grid layout for each monitor
Each connected display gets its own layout — they don't have to match.
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4
Drag in videos and images per screen
Content on one monitor is independent of content on another.
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5
Hit Go
Every monitor starts playing its own content at once.
Try it on your setup, free
30 days free, no credit card required. Get your license key instantly.
Frequently asked questions
Can each monitor show something completely different?
Yes. Every connected monitor gets its own full-screen window with an independent layout and independent sources — not a single video stretched across your screens.
Does it support 3 or more monitors?
There's no fixed limit in the app — the practical cap is however many displays your GPU can drive at once. Each one gets its own window and layout.
Can I mix images and video across different monitors?
Yes. Images and video are both first-class content in Anemone's layouts, and each monitor's grid can mix them independently of what the other monitors are showing.
Is there a free way to do multi-monitor video playback?
Yes — opening a separate VLC window per monitor and dragging each one across works, and costs nothing. It just means manually repositioning every window each time and no saved layout. See our Anemone vs VLC vs OBS comparison for the full trade-off.
Does it work with ultrawide or portrait-mounted monitors?
Layouts are built around each panel's aspect ratio, including portrait and landscape panels within the same grid. For a portrait-mounted monitor, assign it a layout designed for that orientation rather than relying on automatic rotation detection.