All about SCORE Files
The SCORE file type is primarily associated with Unigine Superposition.
What is an SCORE file?
When you run the Unigine benchmark, it produces a SCORE file that contains your system's performance score and related data. You usually review these results through the benchmarking software itself. For more details on the tool, visit Unigine Benchmark.
There is also a less common use case. Some SCORE files are zipped containers for sheet music. In this instance, the file holds music notation data and is managed by applications like MuseScore. This zipped format helps reduce file size and maintain structure.
Key Details as outlined by FilExt.com:
How to open SCORE files
You need a suitable software like Unigine Superposition to open an SCORE file. Without proper software you will receive a Windows message "How do you want to open this file?" or "Windows cannot open this file" or a similar Mac/iPhone/Android alert. If you cannot open your SCORE file correctly, try to right-click or long-press the file. Then click "Open with" and choose an application. You can also display a SCORE file directly in the browser:. Just drag the file onto this browser window and drop it.
Online SCORE Text Viewer
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Programs that open and convert SCORE files:
- Unigine Superposition
See the previous paragraphs to learn more about the main application. SCORE files are often referred to as Unigine Superposition data files because this type of file is primarily created or used by this software.
- Learning Score (Learning Score) by TribalLearning Score is a multi-media enabled lesson-planner that lets you plan lessons in a graphical time-line. .SCORE files store the Learning Score Files with the actual lesson. Learning Score also lets you export this to either text, a learning object (SCORM) or video.
- Superposition Benchmark (GPU Game Benchmark) by UnigineSCORE files are saved by the GPU stress-testing tool from Unigine. If you have the Advanced or Pro version of the benchmark tool, you could upload them to your profile on https://benchmark.unigine.com and submit those results (saved as the .score-file) to the leaderboards on https://benchmark.unigine.com/leaderboards/. Unigine allows you to run the benchmark in several performance modes ranging from Low Quality upwards to Ultra, Extreme and even more complex settings. Unigine is a proprietary cross-platform game engine developed by Russian software company Unigine Corp. Apart from its use as a game engine, it is mainly used in the enterprise area: simulators, virtual reality systems, serious games and visualization.
SCORE file format:
Each file has a definite file format, that is, how the stored data is arranged in the file. The file format can be deduced from the file extension and the signature. File extension, signature and file format must match; otherwise errors will occur when the file is opened. If there are problems opening a file, you must first determine the file format used. Our analysis of the SCORE files produces the following result:
The SCORE extension is very commonly used. This SCORE file itself is among the most popular common file types and mainly uses a special format. The two most common formats are as follows:
- 95% of all SCORE files start with the bytes 00 00 00 20 crucial for this file format. They consist of illegible, cryptic characters. SCORE files are between 6 KB and 8 KB in size. The file type is relatively new. Such SCORE files store data about superposition, benchmark, stock, core, extreme and base.
- 2% of all SCORE files use the ZIP algorithm, so several files are combined and compressed into one SCORE file. The number of files included is on average 1 and ranges from 1 to 2. File names are e.g. 1.png. A little tip: If you rename the file extension to .zip and then double-click, you will see the included files and images. The file size is in the range of 600 KB to 1 MB. The keywords 0001.png are typical for these files.
All the rest of the SCORE files (3%) have different formats, frequently e.g. FID. The category is impostor, genuine, finger, hand, eugei, ptest or site. If you want to find out which format your SCORE file belongs to, just click on the button "Choose your .score file to analyze".
Technical Data for SCORE File Extension
an score data file is a special file format and should only be edited and saved with the appropriate software.
How to solve problems with SCORE files
- Associate the SCORE file extension with the correct application.
- Update your software that should actually open data files. Because only the current version supports the latest SCORE file format. Search, therefore, e.g. on the manufacturer website after an available Unigine Superposition update.
- To make sure that your SCORE file is not corrupted or virus-infected, get the file again and scan it with Google's virustotal.com.
- Click here to open your .SCORE file online - secure, fast, and no downloads needed.