TIM to RB conversion is the process of transforming an image stored in the TIM (PlayStation TIM texture/image) format into an RB image container or resource bundle format used by certain game engines or rendering pipelines. This conversion extracts the TIM raster data, optionally decodes palette or VRAM-compressed blocks, and repackages the pixels and metadata into the RB structure so the image can be used by tools or engines that expect RB assets.
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Read guide →Drag your .TIM file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .rb as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .RB file once ready.
TIM files usually have the MIME type image/tim and are often used in PlayStation development or graphic editing tools. RB files, with MIME type application/octet-stream or image/rb depending on the context, are designed for optimized graphics rendering. The conversion involves decoding TIM’s raw image data and encoding it into RB’s format, often using specific codecs tailored for the target environment.
The RB (.RB) format is commonly used for ebook. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like TIM.
While specific technical details aren't available here, RB files generally serve the purpose of storing ebook effectively within their domain.
Converting TIM files to RB format has never been easier with our online TIM to RB converter. Whether you're working with image files or specific project assets, this tool offers a quick and efficient solution to transform your TIM files into RB format without installing any software.
TIM files are typically used for raw or uncompressed images in specialized applications, whereas RB files often contain optimized or proprietary image data suited for faster rendering. While TIM supports certain legacy systems, RB is favored for its enhanced compatibility and smaller file sizes in modern workflows.
Keep TIM source files under 50–100 MB each for faster uploads and conversions; very large PS1 image dumps can slow or fail conversions on low-memory systems.
To preserve original look, enable palette (CLUT) preservation when converting paletted TIM files; if you force RGB conversion you may alter dithering or color indexes.
For the best visual fidelity, convert paletted TIMs to 24/32-bit RB with alpha where applicable; use indexed RB only when you need small file size or engine palette support.
Use batch conversion for multiple TIMs to RB to maintain consistent naming and metadata; test a single file first to lock in settings before converting large batches.
This TIM to RB converter saved me hours of manual work.
Emily R.
Graphic Designer
Fast and reliable conversion every time I use it.
Mike D.
Developer
Simple interface and great output quality for all my TIM files.
Anita S.
Artist
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Format-specific limitation: TIM files may reference hardware VRAM layouts and tiled formats that require decoding — some tiled or custom-packed TIMs may need preprocessing or manual unpacking before reliable RB conversion.