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Transparently compress active games and programs using Windows 10/11 APIs

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CompactGUI transparently compresses your games and programs reducing the space they use without affecting their functionality. It works directly with the Win32 API to achieve the same thing as the native compact.exe command-line tool available from Windows 10 onwards.

   


 

What is compact.exe? It's a commandlet with a collection of new algorithms introduced in Windows 10 that allow you to transparently compress games, programs and other folders with virtually no performance loss.

Transparently? What does that mean? Transparent compression means that files can still be used normally on the computer as if nothing had happened - they don't get repackaged like Zip and Rar files do. You can still browse, launch games and programs exactly as you did before.

How is this different from the built-in compression in older versions of Windows? This is similar to the NTFS-LZNT1 compression built-in to Windows (Right click > Properties > Compress to save space) however the newer algorithms introduced in Windows 10+ are far superior, resulting in greater compression ratios with almost no performance impact. Those with older HDDs may even see a performance gain in the form of reduced loading times - smaller files can be read into RAM faster, and the CPU can decompress them on the fly much faster than a typical HDD can supply them. More information can be found here

Installation

  • Download from GitHub Releases

  • Install using Winget winget install CompactGUI

Uses

Use this tool to compress folders while still being able to use/run them normally:

  • Reduce the size of games (e.g. ARK-Survival Evolved: 169 GB > 91.2 GB)
  • Reduce the size of programs (e.g. Adobe Photoshop: 1.71 GB > 886 MB)
  • Compress any other folder on your computer

Extra Features

  • Visual feedback on compression progress and statistics
  • Configurable list of poorly-compressed filetypes that can be skipped.
  • Online integration with community-sourced database to get compression estimates
    • Steam game results can be submitted to the online database from within CompactGUI
  • Integration into Windows Explorer context menus for easier use.
  • Analyze the status of existing folders
  • Background Watcher - keeps track of folders and monitors them for changes (e.g. Steam game updates) and automatically keeps them compressed in the background.

See the Wiki for a list of that have been tested from submissions

 

Caveat

This tool should not be used on games that utilise DirectStorage on Windows 11.

DirectStorage is a new API that allows games to load assets directly from the SSD, bypassing the CPU. Compressed files will need to be decompressed before being sent to the GPU, which will negate any performance gains.

Background

Windows 10 introduced a little-known but very useful tool called compact.exe that allows one to compress folders and files on disk, decompressing them at runtime. With any modern CPU (I have tested as old as an i3-370M from 2010 with negligible impact), this added load is hardly noticed, and the space savings are of most use on those with smaller SSDs.

As program folders and games can be shrunk by up to 60%, this has the added bonus of potentially reducing load times - especially on slower HDDs.

More information on the inbuilt Windows function can be found here and here or by typing compact /q into the commandline

This tool is intentionally designed to only compress folders and files. Whole drives and entire Windows installations cannot be modified from within CompactGUI - users seeking that functionality should use compact /compactOS from the commandline.

The compression is fully transparent - programs, games and files can still be accessed as normal, and show up in Explorer as they normally would — they'll just be decompressed into RAM at runtime, staying compressed on disk.

Options

By default, the program runs Compact with the XPRESS8K algorithm active. This provides a good balance between compression speed and size reduction. The default that Windows uses is XPRESS4K which is faster but compresses less. The options available are:

  • XPRESS4K: Fastest, but weakest
  • XPRESS8K: Reasonable balance between speed and compression
  • XPRESS16K: Slower, but stronger
  • LZX: Slowest, but strongest - note it has a higher overhead, so use it on programs/games only if your CPU is reasonably strong or the program/game is older.

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Transparently compress active games and programs using Windows 10/11 APIs

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