DOTM to DDS Converter

Convert DOTM to DirectDraw Surface — free, browser-based

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Texture-Ready Output

DDS files integrate directly into game engines and 3D software — your template content becomes a usable texture asset.

No Plugins Needed

The conversion runs entirely on Convertio servers. No Photoshop plugins or texture tools required on your machine.

Fast Conversion

Server-side processing renders your DOTM to DDS quickly — no manual export steps or texture compression setup.

How to convert DOTM to DDS

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose dds or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your dds file right afterwards

About formats

DOTM is a macro-enabled template format for Microsoft Word, introduced with Office 2007 as part of the Office Open XML family. DOTM combines the template functionality of DOTX — providing reusable styles, page layouts, boilerplate content, and formatting definitions — with the ability to embed VBA macro code that executes in documents created from the template. The format is a ZIP archive containing XML parts for styles, document defaults, and theme definitions, plus a vbaProject.bin stream for the VBA project. This combination enables organizations to distribute not just visual consistency but also functional automation: every document created from a DOTM template inherits both the formatting framework and programmatic capabilities. Common use cases include templates that auto-populate document fields from corporate directories, enforce naming conventions, generate tables of contents, insert dynamic headers with project metadata, or validate document structure before submission. One advantage is embedded workflow automation — a DOTM template can include initialization macros that configure the document environment, register custom ribbon commands, and connect to data sources the moment a new document is created from it. The distinct .dotm extension allows administrators to apply differentiated trust policies for macro-containing templates versus standard DOTX files. DOTM is supported exclusively in Microsoft Word desktop editions where VBA execution is available.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: January 30, 2007
DDS (DirectDraw Surface) is a container format for storing compressed and uncompressed textures, cube maps, volume textures, and mipmap chains, introduced by Microsoft with DirectX 7.0 on September 22, 1999. DDS files are designed for GPU-native consumption: the pixel data is stored in formats that graphics hardware can decompress directly during rendering — primarily S3TC/DXTn block compression (DXT1, DXT3, DXT5), and in later DirectX versions BC4 through BC7 — eliminating the CPU-side decompression step required by formats like PNG or JPEG. The file structure begins with a magic number and a 124-byte header specifying width, height, pixel format, mipmap count, and optional DX10 extended header for newer compression modes, followed by the raw surface data. DDS supports 2D textures, cube maps (six faces for environment mapping), volume/3D textures, and texture arrays, each with pre-computed mipmap chains that allow the GPU to sample appropriately sized versions at different distances. One advantage is rendering performance: because the GPU reads DDS data directly without decompression overhead, texture loading is dramatically faster than with traditional image formats, and the compressed data stays compressed in video memory, allowing more textures to fit in VRAM simultaneously. The format's dominance in game development is another key strength — DDS is the standard texture format for DirectX applications, supported natively by Unreal Engine, Unity, and virtually every PC game engine, as well as by image editors like GIMP (with plugin), Paint.NET, Photoshop (via NVIDIA plugin), and ImageMagick.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: September 22, 1999

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DOTM to DDS?

DDS is a texture format used in game engines and 3D applications — useful for creating text-based textures from document content.

What opens DDS files?

GIMP with DDS plugin, Adobe Photoshop with NVIDIA plugin, Paint.NET, and game engines like Unity and Unreal handle DDS.

Is DDS a compressed format?

DDS supports GPU-friendly compression like DXT/BC formats — optimized for real-time rendering in games and 3D environments.

Are macros removed?

Yes — DDS is a texture image format with no script support. All VBA macros from the DOTM are eliminated.

Is DOTM to DDS free?

Yes — free for standard files on Convertio. Premium plans offer extended limits and priority conversion processing.

Can I convert several files?

Upload multiple DOTM files and each produces a DDS texture — batch conversion handles them all simultaneously.