WPG to DDS Converter

Convert WPG images to DDS format online — fast and free

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Secure Processing

Your WPG files are deleted immediately after conversion. DDS outputs are removed from servers within 24 hours — your images stay private.

Format Bridge

Bridge the gap between WPG and modern formats. The converter handles the technical translation so you get a clean DDS file.

Straightforward Steps

No technical knowledge required. Upload your WPG image, choose DDS output, and download — clear, guided, and intuitive.

How to convert WPG 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

WPG (WordPerfect Graphics) is a mixed vector/raster image format developed by WordPerfect Corporation and introduced with WordPerfect 5.0 on May 5, 1988. The format was designed to provide a native graphics capability for WordPerfect documents, supporting both vector drawing elements (lines, curves, polygons, text with font specifications, and filled shapes) and embedded raster images in a single file. WPG exists in two major versions: WPG1, which supports 1-bit and indexed color rasters up to 256 colors with optional run-length encoding compression, and WPG2, introduced later, which added true-color (24-bit) support, OLE object embedding, and enhanced vector capabilities. The vector portion of WPG files stores resolution-independent drawing commands that can be scaled and printed at any output device's native resolution, while the raster portion handles photographic and scanned content. During WordPerfect's peak market dominance in the late 1980s and early 1990s, WPG was one of the most commonly encountered graphics formats in business and legal document workflows, used for logos, diagrams, letterheads, and clip art. One advantage is the hybrid vector/raster capability: WPG could combine scalable line art with photographic imagery in a single file at a time when most formats handled only one or the other, making it practical for the mixed-content graphics typical of business documents. Continued accessibility is another strength — WPG files remain readable by LibreOffice, Corel's current software suite (which inherited WordPerfect), ImageMagick, XnView, and Inkscape, ensuring decades-old documents remain viewable.
Initial release: 1988
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 WPG to DDS?

Very few programs outside WordPerfect can open WPG files. Converting to DDS makes the images universally accessible across all platforms.

What software opens DDS?

Game engines (Unity, Unreal), DirectX tools, GIMP (with plugin), Photoshop (with NVIDIA plugin), and texture viewers.

Is the conversion fast?

Yes — WPG to DDS conversion on Convertio runs on cloud servers and completes in seconds for typical image files.

Do I need to install anything?

No — the entire conversion runs in your web browser. There is nothing to download or install on your computer or phone to convert WPG to DDS.

Is the original resolution preserved?

Yes — the pixel dimensions of your WPG image are maintained in the DDS output. No downscaling or cropping happens during conversion.

Where can I upload WPG files from?

You can upload from your local device, Google Drive, Dropbox, or paste a direct URL. Convertio pulls the WPG file from any of these sources.