TIM to PNG Converter

Export PS1 textures to PNG format online for free

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Effortless Process

The TIM to PNG converter guides you through a clear upload-convert-download workflow — no technical expertise required.

Private & Secure

Your TIM uploads are deleted right after conversion, and the PNG output is removed from servers within 24 hours — your data stays safe.

Fast Conversion

TIM to PNG processing completes in seconds for typical image sizes. Cloud infrastructure keeps turnaround times consistently short.

How to convert TIM to PNG

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

TIM (Texture Image Map) is a raster image format developed by Sony Computer Entertainment) for the original PlayStation console, released in Japan on December 3, 1994. TIM files store texture and sprite data in a format optimized for the PlayStation's GPU (the GTE/GPU subsystem), supporting 4-bit indexed color (16 colors with CLUT), 8-bit indexed color (256 colors with CLUT), 16-bit direct color (5 bits per RGB channel plus 1 semi-transparency control bit), and 24-bit true color modes. The file structure consists of a 4-byte magic number (0x10), a flag byte indicating color depth and CLUT presence, the optional CLUT (Color Look-Up Table) block containing the palette data, and the image data block containing the pixel values. Image dimensions in TIM files are specified in units of 16-bit words rather than pixels, reflecting the GPU's native memory addressing scheme — this means the width value must be interpreted differently depending on the color depth mode. TIM was part of the PSY-Q development kit used by game developers throughout the PlayStation's commercial lifespan. One advantage is direct hardware compatibility: TIM data could be transferred to the PlayStation's VRAM with minimal processing, enabling fast texture loading critical for maintaining frame rates on the console's limited 33 MHz MIPS R3000A processor. The format remains relevant in retro gaming and preservation communities, readable by tools like TIMViewer, PSXPrev, ImageMagick, and various PlayStation development and modding utilities.
Initial release: December 3, 1994
PNG (Portable Network Graphics) is a lossless raster image format developed by the PNG Development Group and published as a W3C Recommendation on October 1, 1996, created as a patent-free replacement for GIF after the Unisys LZW patent controversy. PNG uses a two-stage compression pipeline: a prediction filter selects the optimal per-row preprocessing (none, sub, up, average, or Paeth), then DEFLATE compression encodes the filtered data. The format supports rich color modes — 1/2/4/8/16-bit grayscale, 8/16-bit per channel true color, and indexed color with palettes up to 256 entries — all with optional alpha transparency ranging from a single transparent color to a full per-pixel alpha channel with 256 or 65536 levels. PNG also stores gamma correction, ICC color profiles, text metadata, and suggested background color. One advantage is lossless compression with transparency — PNG preserves every pixel exactly while supporting smooth semi-transparent edges, making it the standard format for web graphics, UI elements, logos, screenshots, and any image where artifacts or color shifts are unacceptable. Universal support is another core strength: every web browser, operating system, image editor, and programming library handles PNG natively. The format has proven remarkably durable — after nearly three decades, PNG remains the default lossless web image format. While newer formats like WebP and AVIF offer better compression, PNG's combination of lossless quality, full transparency, and absolute ubiquity keeps it indispensable.
Initial release: October 1, 1996

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert TIM to PNG?

TIM textures are locked inside PlayStation 1 game data. Converting to PNG lets modders, archivists, and artists work with those sprites freely.

What programs can open PNG?

Every modern browser, Photoshop, GIMP, Paint.NET, IrfanView, and built-in photo viewers on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android.

Is the conversion from TIM to PNG lossless?

PNG preserves image data without lossy compression, so the visual content from your TIM is retained faithfully during conversion.

Is TIM to PNG conversion fast?

The process is fast — cloud-based processing handles TIM to PNG conversion in seconds for standard-sized images, even on slower connections.

Can I convert multiple TIM images at once?

Batch conversion is supported. Queue as many TIM files as you need and convert them all to PNG in a single run — no repeating steps manually.

TIM to PNG Quality Rating

4.5 (8 votes)
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