

PBP FILE HOW TO
full instructions on how to use it are on the README.TXT.I guess it works properly since it extracted 10990 items out of 197 files (every PBP file from every version: WO3E, WO3J, WO3SE, WO3U, WO3UDEMO) Here is (finally) the first version of the unpacker : PS2: you can use SageThumbs to get a preview of TIMs within Explorer TIM as explained in USAGE.TXT, working on another tool for that. So far, it successfully unpacks a PBP and the CMPs inside it, no false-positive AFAIK unpacks a PBP (simplified version of the first tool, better suited for batch operations).searches for CMP files and unpacks them.Two new tools ( UnpackCMPEx and UnpackPBPEx) PS2: your AV might suspect these EXEs, there's nothing I can do about that and you have to allow them, also you can always check the code with JustDecompile PS1: to preview TIM files in Explorer, grab SageThumbs

(in this example I've already renamed them to TIMs but they would pop in the exact same order) You can easily group them within Explorer by sorting by modified date :
PBP FILE UPDATE
There will be a last update (or unless bugs are found), the detection of TIM files for the time being they are easy to spot : every file that has two sequence of numbers (e.g. I've ditched the multiple input files feature as this was limiting the output options and was cumbersome, with the current version you can write your own batch file and keep control of things as you wish. The older version was trying to be smart and failed somehow, now there are two tools that each do a very specific task and both do work well. shipped with an Unpack.bat to make your life easier.it has been simplified, accepts one file and an output directory.There won't be anything new until quite some time now, things needs to be reverse-engineered. At this point you are getting pretty much the same picture as in the attached Excel file, what is not an image is game data things are clearer.
