Why watching video while working is harder than it should be
The core problem is that video players are designed to take your full attention. VLC, Windows Media Player, even most modern apps assume you want to watch the video, not work while it plays. The moment you open one, your desktop collapses behind it. Alt-tab away and you lose the video in the stack. The two activities fight for the same space. Browser Picture-in-Picture was supposed to fix this â but it only works for web video. If your content is a local MP4 or MKV file sitting on your drive, PiP simply doesn't apply. You're on your own.
The real options â compared
Browser Picture-in-Picture
â Works automatically on YouTube, Netflix, and most streaming platforms. Small floating window that stays on top.
â Zero support for local files. If the video isn't playing in a browser tab, PiP doesn't exist. Your entire personal library is excluded.
Split screen (Snap Assist)
â Native to Windows 10/11. No extra software. Video on one side, work on the other.
â Cuts your workspace in half. On a single monitor this is painful â you end up with a tiny editor and a tiny video, neither usable. Works better on large displays but still wastes significant screen real estate.
Always-on-top video player (VLC, mpv)
â VLC and mpv both support always-on-top mode. The window floats above your other apps.
â The window covers part of your screen permanently. More importantly, you can't click through it â clicking the video area clicks the video, not what's behind it. You have to move the window constantly to reach buttons underneath.
Ghost video overlay (BackDrop_)
â The video is transparent â rendered as an overlay on your entire desktop. Adjustable opacity. Full click-through: your mouse and keyboard interact with whatever is underneath, completely ignoring the video. Works with any local file format. The video never interrupts your workflow.
â Windows-only. Requires installing a lightweight app.
The only method that truly works for local files
Ghost overlay is the only approach that solves all three problems at once: it works with local files, it doesn't steal screen space, and your mouse passes right through it. BackDrop_ is built exactly for this. Load any MP4, MKV, AVI, MOV, or TS file â or an entire folder â and it plays as a transparent layer over your desktop. Set the opacity anywhere from 0% (invisible) to 100% (fully visible). At 20â30%, the video is a subtle background presence. At 50%, you can follow it clearly while still seeing your work beneath. Press ESC and it vanishes instantly. Ctrl+Shift+Space brings it back.
What BackDrop_ does
Ghost overlay
Opacity from 0â100%. Barely there or fully visible â adjust in real time.
Full click-through
Mouse and keyboard interact with your work, not the video. Zero interference.
Any local format
MP4, MKV, AVI, MOV, TS, WebM. VLC's codec engine is built in â no extra installs.
Folder playlist
Load an entire folder. BackDrop_ queues episodes in order. Perfect for series.
ESC to hide instantly
One keypress makes it disappear. Ctrl+Shift+Space brings it back.
100% local & private
Nothing is uploaded. No account required. Your files stay on your drive.
Who actually uses this
Developers who watch tutorials or tech talks while coding. Traders who keep a news stream visible while monitoring charts. Students who study with recorded lectures ghosted in the background. Writers and designers who want ambient content without breaking focus. Anyone with a download folder full of episodes they keep telling themselves they'll watch this weekend. BackDrop_ is a one-time purchase of âŹ23.99 â no subscription, no cloud, no account. Install and start watching.
About
Patrick Chen â indie developer at Sublimearts.io. Built BackDrop_ after realizing my own video library had been sitting unwatched for months while I worked.
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