Having problems opening .wav files pulled from .pck file in game

xeno-ost

회원 | Member
Original poster
회원 | Member
May 26, 2020
2
0
hello,
Im trying to get the highest quality BGM files from Xenoblade Chronicles DE.
I've already gotten to the .wav files pulled from the BGM.pck but I can't open them.
The bitrate of the .wav files is 1536kbps. I've already tried opening them in audacity but normal importing does nothing and importing as raw file does work, but since I do not know the settings of the audio file, it doesn't resemble any music.

Hopefully someone will be able to help!
 
hello,
Im trying to get the highest quality BGM files from Xenoblade Chronicles DE.
I've already gotten to the .wav files pulled from the BGM.pck but I can't open them.
The bitrate of the .wav files is 1536kbps. I've already tried opening them in audacity but normal importing does nothing and importing as raw file does work, but since I do not know the settings of the audio file, it doesn't resemble any music.

Hopefully someone will be able to help!

i remember along time ago someone asked me to rip the titlescreen music out of a specific minecraft version on xbox one. It seemed like a simple request. What I discovered is that there are what are called little endian and big endian versions of certain files. In my case a conversion process was needed. I hope this helps.
 
What method did you use to extract them?
I extracted the .pck file using the program Dragon UnPACKer
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i remember along time ago someone asked me to rip the titlescreen music out of a specific minecraft version on xbox one. It seemed like a simple request. What I discovered is that there are what are called little endian and big endian versions of certain files. In my case a conversion process was needed. I hope this helps.
damn, there really isn't a lot of information about converting edianness of a file. Do you by any chance remember what method you used?
 
there really isn't a lot of information about converting edianness of a file. Do you by any chance remember what method you used?
I've used byteswapper for N64 files. Pretty sure it swaps files from little endian to big endian. And back again.
Maybe that program will do what you need? Just thought I'd mention it. :)