Bioruebe is a niche developer whose utilities solve a single, recurring headache for Windows gamers, modders and preservationists: getting assets back out of proprietary installers without running them. The three small command-line tools—cicdec, godotdec and spoondec—each target a specific packaging system that would otherwise lock data away. cicdec cracks open Clickteam Install Creator archives, letting users recover sprites, plug-ins or entire game folders that were bundled for legacy titles. godotdec does the same for Godot Engine .pck containers, a format widely used by indie releases and game-jam prototypes; artists can pull textures, scripts and audio loops straight into their own pipelines for study or remixing. spoondec handles the less common Spoon Installer, often found in Eastern-European shareware, extracting executables and resource DLLs intact. Together the trio form a lightweight toolkit for digital archeology: translators can rip subtitle files, speed-runners can benchmark unpacked levels, and archivists can store clean originals before old installers become incompatible with future Windows builds. No GUI overhead, no adware, just portable binaries that drop recovered files into a chosen folder and log what was found. Bioruebe’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the latest upstream release, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.
Extract files from installers made with Clickteam Install Creator.
DetailsAn unpacker for Godot Engine package files (.pck).
DetailsExtract files from Spoon Installers.
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