From Project to File
When your mix sounds great and the mastering chain is dialed in, it's time to export. 8Bit Forge renders your project directly in the browser using the Web Audio API — no server processing, no waiting. The Export dialog gives you full control over format, quality and what exactly gets rendered.
Step 1 — Open the Export Dialog
Click the Export button in the top bar (or press E). The Export dialog opens with four tabs: Audio, MIDI, Code and Player.
Step 2 — Choose Your Format
Five formats are available:
- WAV — Uncompressed PCM audio
The gold standard for audio quality. No compression, no artifacts, no generation loss. Use WAV when:- You're sending the file to a DAW (Ableton, FL Studio, Logic) for further production
- You want to archive the project at full quality
- File size is not a concern
- MP3 — Compressed audio
The universal sharing format. Smaller file, imperceptible quality loss at 192 kbps+. Use MP3 when:- Uploading to SoundCloud, YouTube, social media
- Sharing a preview with someone who just wants to listen
- File size matters (streaming, mobile)
- FLAC — Lossless compression: Same quality as WAV, about half the file size. Great for archiving when storage is a concern but quality must be preserved.
- AIFF — Apple uncompressed: Equivalent to WAV, preferred format for Logic Pro and Apple ecosystem tools.
- OGG — Open source compressed: Similar to MP3 but open-source. Use for game audio, web apps or platforms that prefer OGG.
Quality Settings
- Sample Rate: 44.1 kHz (CD quality) is the standard — works everywhere. 48 kHz is the standard for video. Higher rates (96 kHz) are only needed for professional post-production.
- Bit Depth: 16-bit (CD) is standard for release. 24-bit gives more dynamic range headroom during production — use it if you're exporting for further mixing in a DAW.
Step 3 — Choose Export Mode
Three export modes control what gets rendered:
Full Mix
Renders the entire arrangement as a single audio file — all tracks mixed together, including the Mixer balance, Master Effects (Delay, Reverb, Chorus, Filter) and the Mastering EQ and Compressor. This is what you upload to SoundCloud or share with listeners.
Stems
Renders each track as a separate audio file — one file per channel (LEAD.wav, BASS.wav, KICK.wav, etc.). Stems are essential when:
- You're sending the project to a mixer or mastering engineer
- Importing into a DAW for additional production (adding live instruments, vocals)
- Creating a remix pack to share with the community
Patterns
Renders each pattern (1–8) as an individual loop file. Perfect for:
- Importing loops into a DJ tool or sample library
- Sharing individual loops as free samples
- Using your patterns in a game or interactive media project
Step 4 — MIDI Export
The MIDI tab exports your pattern's note data as a standard .mid file. Use this when you want to:
- Continue production in a DAW — load your 8Bit Forge composition into Ableton Live, FL Studio or Logic Pro and add real instruments or VST plugins
- Edit note data in a dedicated MIDI editor with full piano-roll control
- Transpose the entire composition to a different key in your DAW
- Trigger external hardware synthesizers from your 8Bit Forge patterns
Step 5 — Normalize and Loop-Ready
Two checkboxes control the final output:
- Normalize audio: Automatically adjusts the output level so the loudest peak reaches 0 dBFS (the maximum without clipping). Enable this when:
- Your mix is quiet and you want it as loud as possible
- Uploading to a platform that expects a standard loudness level
- Loop-ready: Trims any reverb tail at the end of the render so the file loops seamlessly. Essential for:
- Game audio — background music that needs to loop without a click or gap
- Loop packs and sample libraries
- DJ tools and loopers
Step 6 — Check the Info Bar and Export
At the bottom of the dialog, the info bar shows:
- Measure count: How many bars will be rendered (matches your arrangement length)
- Duration: Exact playback time in minutes:seconds
- Est. size: Approximate file size before rendering
When everything looks right, click the green Export button. Your browser will render the audio and automatically trigger a download. For a full-length arrangement, rendering takes a few seconds — the export runs faster than real-time.
What to Do With Your Export
- SoundCloud / YouTube: Upload the MP3 directly. SoundCloud accepts MP3 up to 100 MB; YouTube accepts any format.
- itch.io / game dev: Use OGG or WAV. Export with Loop-ready enabled if the music plays continuously in your game.
- Further production: Export WAV (Full Mix) for mastering software, or Stems + MIDI for a DAW. Use 24-bit for maximum headroom.
- Community sharing: Save to Cloud (top bar → Save → Save to Cloud) to share your project link with the 8Bit Forge community — listeners can play it directly in the browser without downloading anything.
Happy exporting! 🎮
