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PLASMA to FB2 Converter

Turn PLASMA images into FB2 format for free

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Quality Preserved

The converter extracts full image data from PLASMA and encodes it into FB2 at maximum fidelity. No unnecessary quality degradation.

Works in Your Browser

The entire PLASMA to FB2 conversion happens in a web browser. No desktop software to install — just upload, convert, and download.

Many Output Options

The converter supports far more than just FB2. Convert your PLASMA files to dozens of image, document, and vector formats in one place.

How to convert PLASMA to FB2

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose fb2 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your fb2 file right afterwards

About formats

PLASMA is a procedural pseudo-format built into ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released by John Cristy at DuPont on August 1, 1990. Rather than storing pixel data in a file, the PLASMA format algorithmically generates fractal plasma images on the fly using a recursive midpoint displacement algorithm: the image corners are seeded with random colors, then the midpoints of each edge and the center are assigned interpolated colors with random perturbation, and this process recurses until every pixel has been filled. The result is a smoothly varying, cloud-like pattern of blended colors that is unique with each generation. PLASMA images are invoked via ImageMagick's command-line syntax (e.g., convert -size 640x480 plasma: output.png) and the output can be saved to any supported raster format. The generation parameters — seed value, recursion depth, and color space — can be controlled to produce everything from soft pastel gradients to vivid high-contrast turbulence. One advantage is creative utility: PLASMA-generated images serve as excellent starting points for texture synthesis, background generation, displacement maps for 3D rendering, and procedural material creation in game development and digital art workflows. The format's integration into ImageMagick's processing pipeline provides another practical benefit — generated plasma images can be directly piped through ImageMagick's extensive image processing operations (color manipulation, distortion, compositing, morphology) without intermediate file I/O, enabling efficient procedural texture workflows entirely from the command line.
Initial release: 1990
FB2 (FictionBook) is an XML-based ebook format created by Dmitry Gribov in 2004, designed to provide a clean semantic description of a book's content independent of its visual presentation. Unlike page-layout formats, FB2 encodes structure — title, authors, chapters, annotations, genres, epigraphs, poems, footnotes, and binary attachments (typically cover images) — within a single well-formed XML document. This structural approach means reading applications have full control over rendering, allowing the same file to adapt perfectly to a small phone screen or a large e-ink reader. FB2 became enormously popular in Russia and Eastern Europe, serving as the dominant format on major Russian digital libraries and ebook distribution platforms. One significant advantage is metadata richness: the format's schema mandates detailed bibliographic information including author, translator, series position, publication date, and genre classification, making library management and discovery straightforward. The plain-text XML foundation is another strength — FB2 files are human-readable, easy to validate, and simple to transform using standard XML tools like XSLT. The format specification is freely available on GitHub, and a wide ecosystem of readers, editors, and converters supports it across all major platforms, from desktop applications like Calibre to dedicated e-readers with native FB2 rendering.
Developer: Dmitry Gribov
Initial release: 2004

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PLASMA to FB2?

Converting PLASMA to FB2 creates a portable document you can share via email or print — no special image viewers needed on the other end.

What programs open FB2 files?

FB2 files work in their native application ecosystem. Most operating systems include built-in support or free readers for this format.

Why is PLASMA not widely supported?

PLASMA is a procedural image generation type, not a standard file format. Converting it to a widely supported format makes the output universally usable.

What happens to uploaded files?

Your PLASMA files are processed on secure servers, then deleted automatically. Converted FB2 files are available for 24 hours, then erased.

Does converting PLASMA to FB2 lose quality?

Conversion preserves the quality present in the PLASMA original. Any limitations come from the source resolution, not from the conversion step.