SWF File Recovery: How to Recover and Repair SWF Files

I recently utilized recovery software to retrieve video and pictures from the SD card of my digital camera. A 1.27GB SWF file was among the files and I have no idea why it was included and am unable to get it to open in an SWF player. Is it damaged or is there another problem? How can I get this SWF file back and open it?

SWF, short for Shockwave Flash Movie, is a video file that is created by an Adobe program. Thus, .swf files are generally used for the efficient delivery of multimedia content over the website.

You said that you have used an SWF file recovery program to get back your SWF file and turned out the file cannot be opened normally. It seems like your SWF file is corrupted or damaged. You should try EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard to recover and repair lost SWF files. The procedure to recover SWF files is simple.

 Download for Win Recovery Rate 99.7%
 Download for Mac Trustpilot Rating 4.7

The necessary steps are:

Step 1. Run the EaseUS SWF file recovery tool. Choose the SD card that has the damaged videos. You can also choose a local drive or a detachable disk. After that, click Scan to begin.

Step 2. This software will thoroughly search the chosen SD card and show all files (including lost and existing files). Choose Videos from the list of file types on the left, and then choose an individual video format, such as SWF, MP4, MOV, GIF, etc. Instead, you might use the name of the camera that took the video to quickly discover the files you need to fix.

Step 3. The software has fixed it for you when you can preview the video. To avoid data overwriting, click Recover to restore and repair the corrected SWF files to a separate location.

This software can help you recover and repair corrupted MP4 files and also SWF files. You can download this useful software by clicking the buttons below.

Use EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard to recover deleted or lost files easily and quickly.

Tutorials on how to recover lost, deleted, or formatted data from HDD, SSD, USB, SD card, or other storage media on Windows and Mac.