SWF to AMB Converter

Extract ambisonic AMB audio from Flash SWF files

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Flash to Spatial Audio

Extract audio from SWF Flash files and deliver it in AMB format for ambisonic and spatial audio production pipelines.

Channel Configuration

Set up the AMB channel mapping and encoding parameters to produce a file that fits your spatial audio toolkit.

Server Processing

Our cloud handles the SWF decoding and AMB encoding. Your workstation stays free for creative work.

How to convert SWF to AMB

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SWF (Small Web Format, originally Shockwave Flash) is a file format for multimedia, vector graphics, and interactive content created by Macromedia in 1996 and later developed by Adobe Systems following the acquisition of Macromedia in 2005. SWF files contain a combination of vector and raster graphics, animations, embedded audio and video, and ActionScript code for interactivity, all packaged in a compact binary format designed for efficient web delivery. During its heyday from the late 1990s through the early 2010s, SWF powered a vast ecosystem of web content including animated websites, banner advertisements, casual games, educational applications, and interactive multimedia experiences. The vector-based rendering engine allowed smooth animations and scalable graphics at remarkably small file sizes, making rich multimedia content practical even on slow internet connections. SWF supported progressive rendering, allowing content to begin playing before the entire file was downloaded. Adobe Flash Player at its peak was installed on over 98% of internet-connected desktop computers, giving SWF an unmatched reach for interactive web content. The format evolved to support video playback, camera and microphone access, 3D acceleration, and socket connections for real-time applications. Adobe ended Flash Player support in December 2020, but SWF files remain historically significant and are preserved through open-source projects like Ruffle that enable continued access to this era of web content.
Initial release: 1996
AMB files contain audio encoded in Ambisonic B-format, a full-sphere surround sound technique conceived by Michael Gerzon during the 1970s. Unlike channel-based systems such as 5.1 or 7.1, Ambisonics captures a complete three-dimensional sound field using spherical harmonics — first-order B-format consists of four channels: W (omnidirectional), X (front-back), Y (left-right), and Z (up-down). This representation is speaker-independent, meaning one recording can be decoded to any loudspeaker arrangement or binaural headphones without remixing. AMB files typically store uncompressed PCM data and are processed by tools like SoX or specialized plugins. A core advantage is spatial flexibility — creators produce one master file that adapts to stereo, surround, or immersive playback. The format also scales elegantly: higher-order Ambisonics adds channels for increased spatial precision upon the same mathematical framework. With the growth of virtual reality, 360-degree video, and spatial audio for gaming, Ambisonics has experienced a resurgence, adopted by platforms like YouTube for immersive media delivery.
Initial release: 1975

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SWF to AMB?

AMB is used in ambisonic audio workflows. If you need spatial audio from Flash content, AMB is the format your tools expect.

How do I play AMB files?

Ambisonic-capable DAWs, VLC with spatial audio plugins, and specialized 3D audio tools can decode and play AMB files.

What is ambisonic audio?

Ambisonics capture sound from all directions, enabling 3D spatial audio playback through headphones or surround speaker setups.

Is SWF audio spatial?

SWF audio is typically stereo. The conversion maps it into the AMB container, where your audio tools can process it further.

Is Flash Player needed?

No. The SWF is processed on our cloud servers. Flash Player is never required on your device.