VOC to FAP Converter

Transform Sound Blaster VOC recordings into FAP audio

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

Research-Ready

FAP serves specialized audio processing. Converting VOC to FAP delivers audio in the format your research pipeline expects.

Server-Side Encoding

No local SoX or research tools needed. The conversion runs on our cloud infrastructure with no setup on your end.

Secure Processing

Uploaded VOC files are deleted immediately after conversion, and FAP outputs are purged within 24 hours.

How to convert VOC to FAP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

VOC (Creative Voice) is a digital audio container developed by Creative Technology and introduced alongside the original Sound Blaster card in 1989. It served as the native audio format for the Sound Blaster family during the DOS era, when Creative's hardware dominated PC audio. VOC files are block-based: each file consists of typed data blocks that can carry 8-bit unsigned PCM, 4-bit and 2.6-bit Creative ADPCM, 16-bit signed PCM, as well as A-law and mu-law encoded audio. This block structure also supports silence intervals, repeat loops, and marker points, giving game developers fine-grained control over sound playback. A notable advantage was hardware-level decoding — Sound Blaster cards could play VOC data directly via DMA transfer, freeing the CPU for other tasks in an era when processor cycles were precious. The format saw extensive use in DOS games from id Software, Sierra, and LucasArts. With the rise of Windows and the WAV format, VOC gradually fell out of mainstream use, yet it remains important for retro gaming preservation and for anyone working with vintage PC audio archives.
Initial release: 1989
FAP is a byte-swapped variant of the PAF (Paris Audio File) format associated with the Ensoniq PARIS digital audio workstation, a recording environment popular among project-studio engineers in the late 1990s. Where standard PAF stores sample data in big-endian order, FAP reverses the byte layout for little-endian architectures, enabling direct memory mapping on Intel-based processors without a runtime byte-swap penalty. The underlying payload is uncompressed linear PCM at up to 24-bit depth and 96 kHz sampling, preserving full studio-grade fidelity. Because there is no lossy coding stage, recordings survive unlimited edit cycles with zero generational loss — a critical property during tracking and mixing. The SoX command-line utility maintains read/write support for FAP, making it the most accessible tool for converting legacy PARIS sessions to modern formats. Despite its niche origins, FAP demonstrates solid engineering: the header is minimal and deterministic, eliminating ambiguity that sometimes plagues chunk-based containers. Advantages include bit-perfect audio preservation, fast I/O on x86 hardware due to native byte order, and straightforward interoperability with raw PCM tools.
Developer: Ensoniq
Initial release: 1998

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert VOC to FAP?

FAP is a niche audio format for signal processing and research contexts. Converting VOC to FAP feeds audio into these specialized pipelines.

What can open FAP files?

SoX can decode and play FAP files. Standard media players do not support this format — convert to WAV or MP3 for general playback.

What is the FAP format?

FAP is a specialized audio container for research and signal processing workflows. It stores audio data with minimal overhead.

Can I play FAP files?

SoX is the primary tool for FAP playback and processing. Most consumer media players will not recognize FAP files.

Is FAP widely used?

FAP is a niche format — appearing in specific research environments and legacy audio processing chains, not mainstream audio.