OPUS to MAUD Converter

Produce Amiga MAUD format audio from OPUS files

Drop files here. 1 GB maximum file size or Sign Up
to
Facebook Amazon Microsoft Tesla Nestle Walmart L'Oreal

Amiga Native Audio

MAUD is the Electronic Arts format for Amiga — produce authentic audio from OPUS for retro computing projects.

Online Processing

No Amiga emulator needed for conversion — generate MAUD files from OPUS directly in your browser.

Rapid Encoding

MAUD files from OPUS sources are produced quickly — your retro audio is ready in seconds.

How to convert OPUS to MAUD

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

Opus is a versatile, open audio codec standardized by the IETF as RFC 6716 in 2012. It fuses two coding approaches — SILK for speech and CELT for music — into one algorithm that blends between them based on content type and bitrate. This hybrid design lets Opus outperform virtually every other codec across a wide range of uses: low-latency voice at 6 kbps, high-fidelity music at 128 kbps, and everything in between. It supports bitrates from 6 to 510 kbps, sample rates up to 48 kHz, and frame sizes as small as 2.5 ms, giving it the lowest algorithmic latency of any mainstream audio codec. Three advantages make Opus especially compelling. It is completely royalty-free and open-source, removing licensing barriers that hold back proprietary codecs. It achieves transparent quality at roughly half the bitrate of MP3 and beats AAC at equivalent rates. And its low latency makes it the mandatory codec for WebRTC, so every modern browser ships with an Opus decoder. WhatsApp, Discord, Zoom, and YouTube all rely on Opus for real-time audio.
Initial release: September 11, 2012
MAUD is an audio file format developed by MacroSystem for the Commodore Amiga platform, introduced in the early 1990s as part of their digital video and audio production tools. Built on the Amiga IFF (Interchange File Format) chunk architecture, MAUD files organize data into clearly delineated chunks — MHDR for the header, MDAT for sample data, and optional annotation chunks for metadata. The format supports mono and stereo layouts with bit depths of 8 or 16 bits and sample rates up to 48 kHz, which represented professional-grade specifications on Amiga hardware. Both signed linear PCM and A-law/mu-law encodings are available, offering a choice between fidelity and file size. MAUD saw primary use in the Amiga video production community, where MacroSystem Retina and VLab Motion boards demanded synchronized audio that the standard 8SVX format could not deliver. Conversion support exists today through SoX and libsndfile, ensuring vintage Amiga productions remain recoverable. Three distinct advantages stand out: clean IFF-based structure that any chunk-aware parser can navigate, 16-bit stereo capability ahead of typical Amiga audio, and lightweight overhead that left maximum CPU headroom for video rendering.
Initial release: 1992

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert OPUS to MAUD?

MAUD is an Amiga audio format by Electronic Arts. Amiga emulator projects and retrocomputing enthusiasts need MAUD audio files.

What reads MAUD?

Amiga emulators (UAE), original Amiga systems, SoX, and specialized retro audio tools process MAUD format.

Is MAUD widely supported?

MAUD is Amiga-specific — modern mainstream players do not support it. Its use is limited to Amiga ecosystems.

What quality can MAUD store?

MAUD supports various sample rates and bit depths — quality depends on encoding parameters chosen for the conversion.

Can I batch process?

Upload multiple OPUS files and produce MAUD output for each simultaneously — build Amiga audio assets quickly.