By maxpayn on Skatehive
Getting subtitles shouldn't be a headache, but for some reason, people still think you have to manually type everything out or fight with clunky browser tools. If you're like me and you spend a lot of time watching those 3-hour "deep dive" essays Src: Giphy (Google search) or technical tutorials that are trending lately, sometimes you just need the text to scan through or save for later without re-watching the whole thing. I don't always have the patience to sit through a massive video just to find one specific quote or a line of code. I found a tool recently that’s actually straightforward—no weird ads popping up every two seconds or those annoying "premium" paywalls that lock the file behind a credit card. It’s just called Download YouTube Subtitles, and it does exactly what the name says. Credit: DownloadYouTubeSubtitles.com The process is pretty basic. You just grab the link of the video you’re watching, paste it into their search bar, and it pulls up all the available captions. W