Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your LCP file.
You’ll see a preview, if available.
Click the "Convert file to..." button to extract text information.
Convert LCP to another file type
To convert your LCP file to another format, you need Comp/Con or other Game software.
Convert a file to LCP
To convert other file formats to the "RPG Content Container" file type, you need software like Comp/Con or a similar tool.
About LCP files
The .LCP extension primarily serves two distinct user bases, creating significant ambiguity. Most commonly, it is a Lancer Content Pack, a data archive used by the Comp/Con companion application for the Lancer tabletop RPG. These files are technically ZIP containers holding JSON data, images, and definitions for mechs and items. Users often struggle because the format is opaque; without the specific app, the data is locked away. To view or edit the raw game data, the best workflow is converting (or renaming) the file to ZIP to extract the internal JSON structure.
Alternatively, an .LCP file is an Adobe Lens Correction Profile. Used by Adobe Lightroom and Adobe Photoshop, these files contain XML data describing optical defects (distortion, vignetting) of specific camera lenses. While critical for photographers, they are proprietary configuration files that cannot be easily viewed or printed. Converting these to XML or TXT allows users to inspect the calibration data in a standard text editor. Less frequently, LCP files may be associated with FARSITE wildfire landscape data or LaserCut project files.
Convert.Guru analyzes your LCP file, detects the exact format, and lets you read the text inside.
If you want to convert LCP file to PDF or EPUB, you can use Comp/Con or similar software from the "Lancer RPG Data Archive" category. In the File menu, look for Save As… or Export….
To convert files to LCP, try Comp/Con or another comparable tool in the "Lancer RPG Data Archive" category.
The LCP Converter Story
The history of Convert.Guru began over 25 years ago in California with Tom Simondi’s file-format database. A former contributor to Space Shuttle development and a software pioneer of the 1980s, Simondi established a trusted resource for file type analysis that was even referenced by Microsoft Windows XP. Today, we use modern technology to process and convert thousands of file formats while continually improving our LCP converter.