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I used some program called garbro and attempted to convert to playable format, but error showed up when I tried that. only allows to extract, but not convert (also tried converting using online converters, didnt work)Did you try converting them into something else (say, wav) or you can't even convert them?
Export into some other, playable, format (again, wav, or ogg) , then convert them back to mp3 if you really need it?
I used some program called garbro and attempted to convert to playable format, but error showed up when I tried that. only allows to extract, but not convert (also tried converting using online converters, didnt work)
Not sure what extension means but the raw unextracted original file name is "data.xp3.sig"What extension are the original files in? Can you extract as ogg? Can you play ogg in any player you have? Make sure to tick the extract audio as common format box.
If you need a converter, foobar2000 music player can handle basic conversion but you'll need to find LAME for mp3 conversion. You should be able to convert to wav and flac without anything extra.
Not sure what extension means but the raw unextracted original file name is "data.xp3.sig"
also when extracted using the garbro program, it seems to come out as ogg files, but there are also copies of this files in that came out formatted as 'ogg.sli', which don't seem playable. Also it seems impossible to play the ogg files themselves, i just get errors, no matter which player I use
do you still need help?Anyone know how to extract xp3 files into working mp3?
Trying to get BGM files from AlcotHoneycomb's Kurenai no tsuki, but the extracted mp3 files are unplayable
ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3
ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a flac bgm01.ogg.flac
for /f "delims==" %i in ('dir /b *.ogg') do ffmpeg -i %i -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k %~ni.mp3
C:\Users\User\Downloads\ffmpeg\ffmpeg.exe -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3
It works at last. thank you for the detailed and easy to understand explanation!This one right? https://vndb.org/v2031
In Garbro when double clicking on the archive.xp3 files, Garbro will pop up an "Archive parameters" window that says "Archive content could be encrypted. Choose appropriate encryption scheme."
In that window click on the box to bring up a drop down menu with lots of choices. Select "Kurenai no Tsuki".
Extracting audio as .ogg should work after that.
It is not really a good idea to convert lossy audio, like Vobis into another lossy codec, like mp3, because it will degrade the audio quality. The included Vorbis audio in Kurenai no Tsuki is already stereo 128kbps @ 44.1kHz that was encoded using a really old libVorbis library. If you are having problems playing back Vorbis audio, try installing a codec pack like k-lite or using media playback software that embeds its own decoding library like vlc media player for ffplay. Technically, you could do vorbis->flac to avoid losing quality but that just bloats the size for no reason. The original files are the best quality you are ever going to have.
Knowing all the downsides, if you still want to transcode vorbis audio to mp3, here is a guide: https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Encode/HighQualityAudio
So to transcode bgm01.ogg to mp3 on Windows, you could open a command prompt, navigate to the appropriate directory, and then type something like:
For FLAC, it would be:Code:ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3
To encode every file in a directory from .ogg to .mp3, you could write something like:Code:ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a flac bgm01.ogg.flac
ffmpeg can be downloaded from: https://ffmpeg.org/download.htmlCode:for /f "delims==" %i in ('dir /b *.ogg') do ffmpeg -i %i -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k %~ni.mp3
Make sure it is in %path% or otherwise invoke it directly, like:
Code:C:\Users\User\Downloads\ffmpeg\ffmpeg.exe -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3
Thanks, I will try it out.This one right? https://vndb.org/v2031
In Garbro when double clicking on the archive.xp3 files, Garbro will pop up an "Archive parameters" window that says "Archive content could be encrypted. Choose appropriate encryption scheme."
In that window click on the box to bring up a drop down menu with lots of choices. Select "Kurenai no Tsuki".
Extracting audio as .ogg should work after that.
It is not really a good idea to convert lossy audio, like Vobis into another lossy codec, like mp3, because it will degrade the audio quality. The included Vorbis audio in Kurenai no Tsuki is already stereo 128kbps @ 44.1kHz that was encoded using a really old libVorbis library. If you are having problems playing back Vorbis audio, try installing a codec pack like k-lite or using media playback software that embeds its own decoding library like vlc media player for ffplay. Technically, you could do vorbis->flac to avoid losing quality but that just bloats the size for no reason. The original files are the best quality you are ever going to have.
Knowing all the downsides, if you still want to transcode vorbis audio to mp3, here is a guide: https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Encode/HighQualityAudio
So to transcode bgm01.ogg to mp3 on Windows, you could open a command prompt, navigate to the appropriate directory, and then type something like:
For FLAC, it would be:Code:ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3
To encode every file in a directory from .ogg to .mp3, you could write something like:Code:ffmpeg -i bgm01.ogg -c:a flac bgm01.ogg.flac
ffmpeg can be downloaded from: https://ffmpeg.org/download.htmlCode:for /f "delims==" %i in ('dir /b *.ogg') do ffmpeg -i %i -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k %~ni.mp3
Make sure it is in %path% or otherwise invoke it directly, like:
Code:C:\Users\User\Downloads\ffmpeg\ffmpeg.exe -i bgm01.ogg -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 320k bgm01.ogg.mp3