If you're adding the screenshots you take to a website, or need to make them identifiable for other reasons, you have the option of adding watermarks. There's also a blur option for obscuring sections of an image if required. The editor is basic, but it includes all of the essential image editing tools you would expect and are likely to need for screenshot markup and tweaking – the likes of pens tools, shapes, overlays, stamps, arrows and so on. When you're capturing standard screenshots, you can have them automatically open in the built-in editor for further work, or just save them as they are. Think Windows' Snipping Tool on steroids, and you're getting close to understanding what Sniptool is like. These options enable you to capture moving footage of on-screen action. But where things get interesting is with MPEG and animated GIF capture. It can be used to grab the entire screen, a selectable rectangle, the current window, and more – each with its own keyboard shortcut for ease and speed. Sniptool has a very similar feel to the Snipping Tool that is built into Windows 10, but it take things a little further. You could keep thing super simple and just use the Print Screen key on your keyboard, of course, but it's nice to have access to a few extra options without the need to resort to an image editor. Screen capture tools are pretty plentiful, and even Microsoft has seen fit to include one in Windows 10.