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DOCX vs SUB

DOCX vs SUB

A detailed comparison of Word Document and MicroDVD Subtitle — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

DOCX

Word Document

Documents & Text

DOCX is the modern Microsoft Word format based on Open XML. It is the most widely used word processing format in business and education, supporting rich text, images, tables, and macros.

About DOCX files
SUB

MicroDVD Subtitle

Documents & Text

SUB (MicroDVD) is a subtitle format that uses frame numbers for timing instead of timestamps.

About SUB files

Strengths Comparison

DOCX Strengths

  • Much smaller than the legacy .doc format thanks to ZIP compression.
  • Human-readable XML inside — automated extraction and manipulation is straightforward.
  • Preserves formatting, images, tables, footnotes, comments, and track changes.
  • Supported natively by Word, LibreOffice, Pages, Google Docs, and most modern editors.
  • ISO/IEC 29500 standardized — not locked to a single vendor.

SUB Strengths

  • VobSub preserves DVD subtitle appearance exactly.
  • MicroDVD is trivially editable text.
  • Universal player support (VLC, mpv, MPC).
  • Historical format for DVD-era subtitle preservation.

Limitations

DOCX Limitations

  • Subtle formatting drifts when opened in non-Microsoft editors (fonts, line spacing, tab stops).
  • Macros and embedded scripts make older .docm variants a common malware vector.
  • Complex layouts with floating objects often reflow unpredictably.
  • Version compatibility matters — Word 2007 cannot open some Word 2019 features cleanly.

SUB Limitations

  • Bitmap subtitles (VobSub) cannot be edited as text.
  • MicroDVD frame-based timing breaks on framerate changes.
  • Two incompatible formats sharing one extension causes confusion.
  • Superseded by SRT and ASS for editing and modern streaming.

Technical Specifications

Specification DOCX SUB
MIME type application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document text/x-microdvd (MicroDVD); image/vnd.dvb.subtitle (VobSub)
Container ZIP archive (Office Open XML)
Standard ISO/IEC 29500, ECMA-376
Released in Microsoft Office 2007
Legacy predecessor .doc (binary, OLE Compound File)
Extension .sub (paired with .idx for VobSub)
Variants MicroDVD (text), VobSub (bitmap)
Common conversion OCR VobSub → SRT

Typical File Sizes

DOCX

  • Short letter (1 page) 15–30 KB
  • Academic paper (20 pages, no images) 80–200 KB
  • Report with several images (30 pages) 1–5 MB
  • Dissertation with figures (200 pages) 10–30 MB

SUB

  • MicroDVD .sub for 2-hour movie 50-100 KB
  • VobSub .sub (2-hour movie) 1-10 MB
  • VobSub .idx metadata 50-200 KB

Ready to convert?

Convert between DOCX and SUB online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

DOCX is the default document format for Microsoft Word since 2007, based on the Office Open XML standard. It stores text, formatting, images, tables, and macros in a compressed XML-based package.

SUB (MicroDVD Subtitle) is a document format used to store paginated text, with optional formatting, tables, images, hyperlinks, headers and footers. It sits in the documents & text family and is typically associated with a specific office suite or publishing pipeline that defined the format and ships the canonical reader.

DOCX files open in Microsoft Word, Google Docs (free), LibreOffice Writer (free), and Apple Pages. You can also view them in web browsers using OneDrive or Google Drive.

Modern office suites — Microsoft Word, Google Docs, LibreOffice Writer, Apple Pages — open most SUB files with reasonable fidelity. If your installed software does not support SUB, convert to DOCX or PDF first using KaijuConverter; both open in virtually every reader, including free online viewers.

Use DOCX when the document will be edited by others or needs collaborative review. Use PDF when you want to lock the layout and ensure the document looks identical on every device and printer.

Upload the SUB to KaijuConverter and pick DOCX, PDF, ODT, RTF, HTML, Markdown, or plain text. Our pipeline runs LibreOffice headlessly plus pandoc for text formats — the same engines behind professional document pipelines. Styles, tables, images, and hyperlinks survive the conversion intact.