✓ Choose your preferred option: subscription or one-time purchase
The Clash Royale Widget After Effects template is a compact, creator‑friendly motion design asset built for fast, polished overlays in gaming videos. Optimized for a 1:1 square format, this template drops straight into your workflow so you can brand your content, display stats, or highlight key moments—without reinventing your timeline. Whether you produce YouTube gaming breakdowns, Instagram Reels, TikTok micro-edits, or Twitch recaps, this widget gives you a professional, animated layer that looks clean and crisp at any size. And at just 7 EUR, it’s an affordable way to upgrade your edits instantly.
Designed natively in Adobe After Effects with shape layers, expressions, and thoughtful animation curves, the widget delivers a Clash Royale–inspired aesthetic while staying flexible for your own brand. The file focuses on fast customization—change colors, text, timing, and icons in seconds—so you can spend more time cutting gameplay and less time building graphics from scratch. Please note: Clash Royale is a trademark of its respective owner. This product is unofficial and not affiliated with or endorsed by any game publisher.
This widget is perfect when you need a compact, readable visual element to call out information during gameplay, intros, or highlights. Because it’s motion‑designed specifically for square 1:1 delivery, it remains legible in mobile feeds and grid views while still looking premium on desktop.
If you’re refining your video style for the year ahead, pair this widget with the insights from the Best YouTube Editing Styles 2026 guide. It reveals why modern YouTube editing favors bold, scannable motion design and how a clear overlay system can lift retention.
Import the .aep file into your project or open it directly in After Effects. Inside the main composition (1:1, 1080×1080 by default), you’ll find a dedicated Control Layer with color swatches, timing sliders, and text fields. This centralizes your edits so you never need to dig through nested precomps.
Update the primary and accent colors to match your brand or team palette. Replace placeholder text with player names, deck notes, or round counters. The template uses well‑spaced typography with safe margins for square feeds, ensuring clean readability even on small screens. You can also swap in your own icons (PNG/SVG) for added flair without breaking animation timing.
Use built‑in timing controls to speed up or slow down the in/out transitions. The widget’s motion profile balances snappy anticipation with smooth ease curves, so it feels responsive without being jittery. Keep on‑screen durations short for fast highlights or extend them to support commentary segments.
Place the rendered or precomped widget above your gameplay footage. If you’re building multi‑panel edits, consider soft masks or split layouts. For a clean approach to multi‑frame compositions, check our practical guide on how to create split screen videos in After Effects step by step. It pairs well with this widget to keep complex layouts readable.
Render via Adobe Media Encoder using H.264 (High Profile), VBR 2‑pass, with a target bitrate that preserves UI sharpness. The template’s vector‑driven design scales cleanly, but avoid over‑compression—crisp, high‑contrast edges are key to legibility in mobile feeds.
If you want your overlay to lean premium, study luxury motion graphics examples editors can recreate in After Effects. For a restrained, clean look, draw from these minimal motion design examples that keep edits modern. Both approaches integrate beautifully with this widget’s modular system.
Great overlays do two things: they clarify information and they add personality. This template sticks to high‑contrast shapes, clean type, and punchy entrance/exit moves. The animation language borrows from competitive eSports UI—quick reveals, decisive wipes, and subtle overshoot—to feel energetic without obstructing gameplay.
Stylistically, it’s balanced to handle both “fun and friendly” Clash‑inspired palettes and more mature brand colors. You can dial up saturation for hype edits or go restrained for analysis videos. Typography choices prioritize legibility at smaller sizes, with smart kerning and clear hierarchy between labels, values, and icons.
For a big‑picture strategy on marrying idea, pacing, and polish, read the Best YouTube Editing Styles 2026 breakdown. The article outlines why overlays like this are now central to viral‑ready edits.
Square video remains a workhorse for social discovery. The 1:1 frame earns generous vertical real estate in many feeds, frames nicely in grid views, and translates well to desktop. It also simplifies crops and reframes—your CTA or scoreboard won’t get pushed offscreen by aggressive platform UI.
If you produce both portrait and landscape content, use this 1:1 widget as a design anchor. You can port the colors, spacing, and animation to 9:16 or 16:9 while preserving the core visual system. That consistency is what turns scattered clips into a recognizable brand.
Building multi‑panel highlights? This square widget remains legible inside grid layouts. For a clean methodology, revisit the step‑by‑step split screen tutorial for After Effects.
Not included: music, third‑party fonts, game art, logos, or trademarked assets. Use any licensed typeface that suits your brand. The design uses generic UI shapes and animation that evoke a competitive gaming feel without copying proprietary artwork.
Your purchase grants a single‑user license for unlimited videos on your channels and client work. Redistribution or resale of the source files is not permitted. Tested on current versions of After Effects; for older versions, you may need to update expressions or fonts manually.
We recommend After Effects CC 2020 or later for the smoothest experience. Earlier versions may work, but some expressions or text engine features might require adjustments. Always test with a short render before final delivery.
No. The template is built with native shapes, text animators, and expressions—no plugins required. This keeps setup lightweight and renders fast on most modern systems.
Yes. While the main comp is 1:1, you can place the widget precomp into 9:16 or 16:9 sequences and scale/position as needed. If you frequently mix formats, consider saving separate presets per aspect ratio for consistency.
No. This is an unofficial overlay inspired by competitive gaming UI. It does not include any branded or trademarked assets; you are responsible for using legally licensed graphics in your edits.
Fonts and music are not included. You can use any licensed typeface that fits your brand. The template’s typography is fully editable, so you can match your channel style easily.
Yes, your single‑user license covers unlimited rendered outputs for your channels and paid projects. You may not resell or redistribute the source files themselves.
Render at 1080×1080 or higher with a bitrate suitable for UI (consider 12–16 Mbps H.264 as a starting point). Maintain strong color contrast and avoid overly thin weights for small text.
The download includes quick‑start notes. If you get stuck, review your version of After Effects, font availability, and expression warnings. For layout techniques, the split screen tutorial offers useful comp management tips.
Access entire library and save with annual billing
6 downloads / month
Get StartedPerfect if you want every new drop without overpaying
12 downloads / month
Get All AccessIdeal if you work with clients weekly and need more flexibility