EPUB vs SUB
Una comparativa detallada de EPUB eBook y MicroDVD Subtitle — tamaño de archivo, calidad, compatibilidad y cuál elegir según tu flujo de trabajo.
EPUB eBook
eBooksEPUB is the open standard for reflowable digital books. It adapts text to any screen size and is supported by most e-readers except Kindle. EPUB 3 adds support for multimedia and interactivity.
Sobre los archivos EPUBMicroDVD Subtitle
Documents & TextSUB (MicroDVD) is a subtitle format that uses frame numbers for timing instead of timestamps.
Sobre los archivos SUBComparativa de ventajas
EPUB Ventajas
- Open standard — no vendor lock-in, no DRM required.
- Reflowable text — adapts to any screen size, font size, or orientation.
- Rich typography via CSS, embedded fonts, and SVG.
- Accessibility-first: native support for screen readers, adjustable text, and alt-text.
- Universal across every non-Kindle ebook reader and library app.
SUB Ventajas
- VobSub preserves DVD subtitle appearance exactly.
- MicroDVD is trivially editable text.
- Universal player support (VLC, mpv, MPC).
- Historical format for DVD-era subtitle preservation.
Limitaciones
EPUB Limitaciones
- Kindle does not support EPUB natively (Amazon wants you to convert to AZW3).
- Fixed-layout EPUBs (for children's books, comics) are awkward to author.
- Rendering quality varies between apps — some CSS works everywhere, some does not.
- Adobe DRM (ADEPT) or Apple FairPlay are optional layers that complicate portability.
SUB Limitaciones
- 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- Superseded by SRT and ASS for editing and modern streaming.
Especificaciones técnicas
| Especificación | EPUB | SUB |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | application/epub+zip | text/x-microdvd (MicroDVD); image/vnd.dvb.subtitle (VobSub) |
| Extension | .epub | .sub (paired with .idx for VobSub) |
| Container | ZIP archive | — |
| Markup | XHTML 1.1 (EPUB 2); HTML5 (EPUB 3) | — |
| Standards | IDPF/W3C EPUB 2.0.1, 3.0, 3.2, 3.3 | — |
| Variants | — | MicroDVD (text), VobSub (bitmap) |
| Common conversion | — | OCR VobSub → SRT |
Tamaños típicos de archivo
EPUB
- Novel (300 pages, text only) 200-800 KB
- Illustrated reference book 5-30 MB
- Fixed-layout children's book 30-100 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
¿Listo para convertir?
Convierte entre EPUB y SUB online, gratis y sin instalar nada. Subida cifrada, eliminación automática a las 2 horas.
Frequently Asked Questions
EPUB (Electronic Publication) is the open standard eBook format maintained by the W3C. It supports reflowable text that adapts to screen size, embedded fonts, images, and interactive content, making it the most widely supported eBook format globally.
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.
EPUB files open in Apple Books, Google Play Books, Calibre (free), Kobo eReaders, and Adobe Digital Editions. Note that Amazon Kindle does not natively support EPUB, so conversion to MOBI or AZW3 is needed.
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 EPUB for reading on phones and eReaders since it reflows text to fit any screen. Use PDF for documents with fixed layouts like textbooks with precise formatting, scanned pages, or documents intended for printing.
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.