Convertidor de imágenes Convertidor de vídeo Convertidor de audio Convertidor de documentos
Precios Guías Formatos API
Iniciar sesión
🇬🇧 Switch to English
ICO vs TGA

ICO vs TGA

Una comparativa detallada de ICO Icon y TGA Image — tamaño de archivo, calidad, compatibilidad y cuál elegir según tu flujo de trabajo.

ICO

ICO Icon

Raster & Vector Images

ICO is the icon file format used for favicons and Windows application icons. A single ICO file can contain multiple image sizes and color depths for different display contexts.

Sobre los archivos ICO
TGA

TGA Image

Raster & Vector Images

TGA (Targa) is a raster graphics format used in game development and video editing.

Sobre los archivos TGA

Comparativa de ventajas

ICO Ventajas

  • Multi-resolution: one file, many sizes, OS picks the right one.
  • Universal favicon support in every browser since IE5.
  • Supports transparency (1-bit since 1985, full alpha since XP).
  • Tiny file size — an entire favicon pack typically fits in under 15 KB.
  • No licensing or patent concerns — fully in the public domain spec-wise.

TGA Ventajas

  • Extremely simple — trivially easy to read and write.
  • Lossless with optional RLE compression.
  • Supports 8, 16, 24, and 32-bit color with alpha channel.
  • Universal in legacy game development and 3D rendering pipelines.

Limitaciones

ICO Limitaciones

  • Cannot compress continuous-tone images efficiently — use PNG or WebP for photos.
  • Format is essentially frozen in 1999 — no HDR, no wide gamut, no modern features.
  • Maximum image dimension is 256×256 px (inside an ICO container).
  • Editing requires specialized tools — most image editors treat it as a curiosity.

TGA Limitaciones

  • No metadata, no color profile, no gamma correction.
  • Aging — PNG and EXR cover its use cases with better compression.
  • Bottom-up pixel order trips up newcomer parsers.
  • Not a web format — browsers don't display TGA natively.

Especificaciones técnicas

Especificación ICO TGA
MIME type image/vnd.microsoft.icon image/x-targa
Max resolutions per file 65 535 images
Max single image size 256×256 px
Color depths 1, 4, 8, 24, 32 bits per pixel
Compression Uncompressed bitmap or embedded PNG (Vista+) None or Run-Length Encoding (RLE)
Extensions .tga, .icb, .vda, .vst
Bit depths 8, 16, 24, 32 bits per pixel
Byte order Little-endian

Tamaños típicos de archivo

ICO

  • Classic favicon (16×16 only) < 2 KB
  • Multi-size favicon pack (16/32/48/256) 5-15 KB
  • Full Windows app icon set 20-100 KB

TGA

  • 512×512 game texture (uncompressed) ~768 KB
  • 2K render output (uncompressed) ~12 MB
  • 4K render with alpha (RLE) 20-40 MB

¿Listo para convertir?

Convierte entre ICO y TGA online, gratis y sin instalar nada. Subida cifrada, eliminación automática a las 2 horas.

Preguntas frecuentes

ICO (Icon) is Microsoft's 1985 multi-resolution icon format, originally shipped with Windows 1.0. A single .ico file holds multiple sizes (16×16, 32×32, 48×48, 256×256) so the OS can pick the best one for the current display context. Since 1999, every website uses a favicon.ico to show its icon in browser tabs.

On Windows, ICO files open natively in File Explorer and Photos. On macOS, Preview handles basic display. For editing, use GIMP (free), Photoshop with a plugin, or dedicated icon editors like IcoFX.

Use the PNG-to-ICO converter on KaijuConverter — upload a PNG (ideally square, at least 256×256) and download a multi-resolution ICO with all standard favicon sizes embedded.

A complete favicon pack includes 16×16, 32×32, 48×48, and 256×256 px variants all in one ICO file. The total file size is typically 5-15 KB. Browsers automatically pick the right size for tabs, bookmarks, and desktop shortcuts.

ICO for /favicon.ico (every browser requests this URL automatically). PNG for everywhere else — social media profile images, in-page icons, app logos. Modern favicon best practice includes both an .ico at the root and multiple .png sizes referenced via <link> tags in HTML.

Yes. Every browser still requests /favicon.ico on every domain as its first icon fallback. Modern sites typically provide both favicon.ico and higher-quality SVG or PNG icons via <link rel="icon"> tags — browsers pick the best match.