XOM Converter

Extract text from XOM files


Drop or upload your .XOM file

How to extract text from your XOM file

  1. Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your XOM file.
  2. You’ll see a preview, if available.
  3. Click the "Convert file to..." button to extract text information.

Convert XOM to another file type

To convert your XOM file to another format, you need Worms 3D or other Game software.

  • XOM to EXE
  • XOM to ISO
  • XOM to BIN
  • XOM to CUE
  • XOM to PAK
  • XOM to WAD
  • XOM to PK3
  • XOM to PK4
  • XOM to BSP
  • XOM to MAP
  • XOM to SAV
  • XOM to DAT

Convert a file to XOM

To convert other file formats to the "3D Model / Save File" file type, you need software like Worms 3D or a similar tool.

  • MOD to XOM
  • BIN to XOM
  • CFG to XOM
  • SCX to XOM
  • DAT to XOM
  • MPQ to XOM
  • LOG to XOM
  • CUE to XOM
  • INI to XOM
  • EXE to XOM
  • SCM to XOM
  • ISO to XOM

About XOM files

The .XOM extension refers to two distinct but problematic game file formats. The most common use (approx. 60%) is a proprietary 3D model container used by Team17 for titles like Worms 3D and Worms 4: Mayhem. These files package geometry, textures, and animation data into a binary blob that standard 3D software like Blender cannot natively import. Modders frequently hit a wall here, needing to extract these assets to OBJ, DAE, or FBX formats for editing or 3D printing. The second common variation (approx. 25%) appears in Unity or Ren'Py based games like Oxenfree and Summertime Saga as a save state container. While these often wrap standard JSON data, the .xom extension obscures the content, preventing text editors from recognizing the syntax. Users looking to modify game stats or debug progression often need to convert these save files to JSON or TXT to make them human-readable.

Convert.Guru analyzes your XOM file, detects the exact format, and lets you read the text inside.

Users also converted PACKAGE, VPT and ENGB files.



The XOM 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 XOM converter.