This portable media player is not only a versatile UPnP DLNA Digital Media Renderer (DMR) but also supports a wide range of subtitle formats, enhancing your viewing experience significantly. It allows seamless access to your media files through the Storage Access Framework (SAF), putting you in control of your content.
With full support for SSA/ASS subtitles, you can personalize your viewing by adding or managing your own font files. These subtitles can be adjusted to fit the higher contrast and brightness of HDR and Dolby Vision (DV) playback, ensuring readability. Plus, you have the flexibility to resize the font to your preference.
For those who enjoy Blu-ray and DVD content, the player supports SUP and VobSub subtitle formats starting from version 5.1. Whether your subtitles are embedded in MKV files or side-loaded, you can choose to play them individually or from compressed Zip/7Z/RAR packages during your viewing sessions.
The media player is equipped to handle HDR and DV content, providing a stunning visual experience. It also features digital audio passthrough, MKV chapter navigation, frame-by-frame stepping, audio track selection with delay adjustments, and subtitle selection with time offset capabilities. Additionally, you can view the frame rate and benefit from automatic refresh rate adjustments.
For users with an NVidia Shield TV 2019, Dolby Vision playback is fully supported. The player also allows for on-demand video rotation and full-screen zooming via pinch gestures.
Originally designed for segmented file playback, this player supports files listed in m3u8 (HLS media list) format, which, while originally intended for TS files, now accommodates mp4 and flv formats as well.
What's New in the Latest Version 4.3.1
Last updated on Feb 26, 2023
Please be noticed: This app must run in the foreground before DLNA projecting on some Android systems.
This update includes fixes for subtitles auto-selection, resolves the first chapter 0:00 issue, and adapts to new systems. You can now set your preferred default language for subtitles within the selection box. Additionally, you can select subtitle files directly from the Storage Access Framework content page, which supports local storage, Samba/Windows sharing, and WebDAV clients, depending on your chosen SAF content provider apps. Efforts have also been made to fix a DMR service crash bug.