How to open .GL files on iOS
To open .GL files on iOS, iOS typically cannot open GRASP .GL animations directly; transfer the file to a desktop system to open with GRASP (DOS environment) or a GRASP-compatible tool such as AfterGRASP, then export to a modern format for mobile viewing.
Step-by-step instructions
- iOS typically cannot open GRASP .GL animations directly; transfer the file to a desktop system to open with GRASP (DOS environment) or a GRASP-compatible tool such as AfterGRASP, then export to a modern format for mobile viewing.
Recommended software
- Files player
- VLC for Mobile
- Infuse
Alternative methods
- Open .GL in a browser-based viewer if desktop apps fail.
- Try opening .GL on iOS with a secondary app to rule out app-specific issues.
- Convert .GL only with trusted tools when direct opening is not possible.
Common issues
The .GL file opens in a media player but won’t play
Many systems associate .gl with a “video” MIME label, but GRASP .GL is not a modern, widely supported video format.
- Try opening the file with GRASP (MS-DOS) or a GRASP-compatible tool such as AfterGRASP instead of a standard media player.
- If you need playback in modern apps, use the GRASP-compatible toolchain to export/convert to a modern format after opening successfully.
“Unknown file format” or “corrupt file” errors
This can happen if the file is incomplete, not actually a GRASP .GL file, or contains content produced by a specific GRASP/GLPRO workflow that your tool does not fully support.
- Re-download or re-copy the file from the original source to rule out transfer corruption.
- Confirm the file’s origin (GRASP/GLPRO). If possible, obtain the original GRASP files and re-export to a fresh .GL from the authoring environment.
- Try a different GRASP-compatible tool (for example, AfterGRASP vs. running the original GRASP environment) if one fails.
The file opens but visuals/timing look wrong
GRASP animations were designed for DOS-era timing, display modes, and hardware expectations; playback in modern environments/emulators can differ.
- If using an emulator, adjust its timing/performance settings and retry playback.
- Test playback/export using an alternative GRASP-compatible tool (such as AfterGRASP) to see if it interprets the content differently.
Security note
.GL (GRASP) files are data/animation files, but they are still parsed by specialized software; treat files from untrusted sources as potentially risky because malformed files can sometimes trigger vulnerabilities in file parsers.