VOB vs WMA
A detailed comparison of DVD Video Object and Windows Media Audio — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
DVD Video Object
Video FilesVOB (Video Object) is the container format for DVD video content.
About VOB filesWindows Media Audio
Audio FilesWMA is a proprietary Microsoft audio format from the Windows Media framework. Once common in the Windows ecosystem, it has been largely replaced by AAC and MP3 for general use.
About WMA filesStrengths Comparison
VOB Strengths
- Universal DVD support on every player ever made.
- Carries multiple audio tracks, subtitles, and menus in one container.
- Mature tooling ecosystem for extraction and editing.
WMA Strengths
- Good quality at low bitrates (32-64 kbps) — outperformed MP3 in that range.
- Native playback on every Windows version 2000 through 10.
- Lossless variant available (WMA Lossless) for archiving.
- Supports multichannel 5.1 surround audio.
Limitations
VOB Limitations
- Hard 1 GB file-size cap forces multi-file splits.
- MPEG-2 compression is 2-3× larger than modern codecs.
- Tied to CSS copy protection — decryption was once illegal.
- Disc-era format; streaming replaced DVDs for most users.
WMA Limitations
- Proprietary — poor support outside Windows and Windows Media Player.
- DRM variants made files brittle — many purchased tracks became unplayable when stores shut down.
- Ecosystem abandoned — no modern editors, hardware decoders, or streaming services use WMA.
- Windows 11 deprecated Windows Media Player entirely.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | VOB | WMA |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | video/dvd | audio/x-ms-wma |
| Extension | .vob | .wma |
| Container | MPEG-2 Program Stream with DVD extensions | ASF (Advanced Systems Format) |
| Video codec | MPEG-2 | — |
| Audio codecs | AC-3, DTS, MPEG audio, LPCM | — |
| Variants | — | WMA Standard, WMA Pro, WMA Lossless, WMA Voice |
| Max bitrate | — | 768 kbps (WMA Pro) |
Typical File Sizes
VOB
- Single VOB segment ~1 GB (capped)
- 2-hour DVD movie (full VIDEO_TS) 4-7 GB
WMA
- 3-min song (128 kbps) 3 MB
- 3-min song (Lossless) 25-35 MB
- 1-hour talk (64 kbps) 28 MB
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Convert between VOB and WMA online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.
Frequently Asked Questions
VOB (DVD Video Object) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the VOB wrapper. It is part of the video files family.
WMA (Windows Media Audio) is an audio file format used to store sound recordings — music, voice, podcasts, sound effects. The format defines how the audio samples are compressed (or stored raw), what bitrates are supported, and how metadata such as title, artist, album, and cover art is embedded. It is part of the audio files family.
VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every VOB file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche VOB variants may fail. If a device refuses your VOB, convert to MP4 with our VOB to MP4 converter for universal playback.
VLC, foobar2000, and the default media players on Windows and macOS handle WMA natively. On mobile, iOS Music and Android media apps vary in their support — popular formats work everywhere; niche ones may need a dedicated app. If playback fails on a device, converting to MP3 or AAC usually solves it.
Upload your VOB to KaijuConverter and pick MP4, MOV, MKV, WebM, or any other target. Our pipeline uses FFmpeg under the hood and stream-copies when codecs are compatible (no quality loss) or transcodes at high-quality defaults otherwise. Conversion runs server-side; both files delete within two hours.
Only when the target requires re-encoding. If the codecs inside VOB match what the target container supports, FFmpeg stream-copies the streams and the output is bit-identical to the source. Transcoding uses transparent quality defaults (CRF 20–23 H.264) and produces output indistinguishable from the original at normal viewing distance.