Introducing our versatile portable media player, designed to elevate your viewing experience with its robust feature set. Not only does it function as a UPnP DLNA Digital Media Renderer (DMR), but it also offers seamless access to your files through the Storage Access Framework (SAF), which is fully customizable by users.
For subtitle enthusiasts, our player supports full-featured SSA/ASS subtitles, allowing users to manage and add their own font files. Enhance your viewing with customizable dimming options for SSA/ASS subtitles, making them compatible with the higher contrast and brightness of HDR and Dolby Vision (DV) playback. You can also adjust the font size to your preference.
Additionally, the player supports subtitles in SUP (Blu-ray) and VobSub (DVD) formats, starting from version 5.1. Whether your subtitles are embedded in MKV files or side-loaded, you can easily select and apply a single subtitle file or a package in Zip/7Z/RAR format during playback.
Our media player is optimized for HDR and DV content, ensuring a visually stunning experience. It also features digital audio passthrough, MKV chapter navigation, frame-by-frame stepping, audio track selection and delay, as well as subtitle selection and time offset capabilities. Users can also benefit from frame rate display and automatic refresh rate adjustment.
Dolby Vision playback has been successfully tested on the NVidia Shield TV 2019, and you can rotate videos on demand or use pinch-to-zoom for full-screen viewing.
Originally designed for segmented files playback in m3u8 (HLS media list) format, our player now supports not only TS files but also mp4 and flv formats.
What's New in Version 4.3.1
Last updated on Feb 26, 2023
Important Note: For optimal performance, the app must run in the foreground before initiating DLNA projecting on certain Android systems.
This update includes fixes for subtitles auto-selection, the first chapter 0:00 issue, and new system adaptations. You can now set the default subtitle language within the subtitles selection box. Additionally, you're able to select a subtitle file directly from the Storage Access Framework content page, which can be sourced from local storage, Samba/Windows sharing, or WebDAV clients—depending on your chosen SAF content provider apps. We've also addressed a DMR service crash bug to enhance stability.