How to Convert WordStar Files to Plain Text (ASCII) and Microsoft Word

You have a bunch of old WordStar files from the 1980s. When you open one of these files in NotePad or Microsoft Word or some other modern word processing program, you see lot of gibberish:

  ma i rubbe hosin dow hi a 1 noon 
  shor broo
i th othe hand.

Typical Gibberish-Greek Contained in 1980s-era WordStar Files


Skip the Story and Go to the Instructions

You search the web for a simple and free solution to your problem of converting WordStar files to plain text files. You read the Wikipedia article on WordStar. You try the conversion program recommended by the UCLA Knowledge Base. You try add-ons converters to Microsoft Word. But nothing works.

Finally, you come across this WordStar discussion page on archiveteam.org:

Initial D The Arcade Season - 2 Pc

The game’s physics engine runs at a fixed 60Hz tied to the motor’s step-response time. On PC, variable refresh rates or input lag from USB adapters would desync the force-feedback model, causing "phantom torque" — a documented issue in emulated Initial D Arcade Stage 8 on TeknoParrot.

| Component | ALLS UX (Arcade) | Standard PC | Compatibility Gap | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | CPU | AMD Embedded (2.4 GHz) | Intel/AMD Desktop (3.5+ GHz) | Timing-dependent physics loops break | | GPU | Integrated Radeon (GCN) | Any dGPU | Shader recompilation required for DirectX 12 | | Input | 270° optical encoder | USB HID (polling ~8ms) | Force feedback phase shift | | Storage | SLC NAND (low latency) | NVMe/SSD | Asset streaming not optimized for OS overhead | Initial D The Arcade introduced a server-side "AI Ghost" system. Unlike earlier games where ghosts were local, IDTA uploads your best run to Sega’s cloud, and AI clones of top players appear in other cabinets’ "Legend of the Streets" mode. This requires persistent internet and a Sega ID. Initial D The Arcade Season 2 Pc

This is a detailed, analytical paper on the topic. Given the niche nature of this specific arcade game and its unconfirmed "PC Season 2" status, the paper addresses the technical, cultural, and business realities surrounding the Initial D The Arcade series, its platform limitations, and what a hypothetical PC port would entail. Abstract Initial D The Arcade (IDTA), developed by Sega and published by Sega Interactive, represents the latest evolution in a two-decade lineage of arcade racing simulations based on Shuichi Shigeno’s manga. Despite fervent community demand for a PC port—colloquially termed "Season 2 PC"—the title remains exclusive to dedicated arcade cabinets. This paper argues that the absence of an official PC version is not a mere business oversight but a consequence of fundamental hardware architecture (ALLS UX), a specific monetization model (AI-Powered Ghost System and Aime card persistence), and a deliberate preservation of the "arcade social space." By analyzing leaked server data, emulation attempts (TeknoParrot), and Sega’s historical porting failures, this paper concludes that a native PC "Season 2" would require a complete game redesign, effectively creating a different product. 1. Introduction: The Legend of the Eight-Six on Windows The Initial D arcade series began in 2002 with Arcade Stage Ver. 1 . By 2021, Initial D The Arcade (sometimes referred to as ID Zero 2 in Japan) introduced the ALLS UX board, delivering 1080p/60fps visuals with advanced shaders for rain and tire smoke. A "Season 2" update followed, adding cars like the GR Yaris, new BGM packs, and revised physics for counter-steering. The game’s physics engine runs at a fixed

A PC version would "democratize" the experience, but veteran players argue that online ranked lacks the stakes of arcade credit-feeding. On Japanese forums (2channel, thread "PC移植反対"), a common sentiment is: "PCはゴーストの価値を下げる" ("PC lowers the value of ghosts"). This gatekeeping is rational: arcade exclusivity guarantees a controlled, cheat-free environment where skill is proven in person. Initial D The Arcade Season 2 for PC does not exist and, based on technical and economic evidence, is unlikely to ever exist. The game is not a piece of software but a service-hardware hybrid —a closed loop of cabinet, network, and physical card. Attempts to force it onto PC would either degrade the physics (if direct port) or alienate the core fanbase (if redesigned with microtransactions). Unlike earlier games where ghosts were local, IDTA

Sega World Drivers Championship (2018 arcade) was announced for PC but canceled. Internal documents leaked during the 2021 Nvidia GeForce Now leak suggested "low projected ROI" due to the small niche of sim-cade touge fans. 5. Cultural Gatekeeping: Why Arcade Remains the "True" Experience Interviews with Round1 USA managers (2023) reveal that Initial D The Arcade cabinets are among the highest-grossing per square foot, beating even Dance Dance Revolution A3 . The social ritual—inserting coins, sliding the Aime card, adjusting the bucket seat—is inseparable from the Initial D identity.

On forums (Reddit r/initiald, Zenius -I- vanisher), a persistent rumor exists: a PC port of "Season 2" is imminent. This paper treats "Season 2 PC" as a hypothetical construct—a wishlist of features (unlocked framerate, LAN play, modding) that clashes violently with the arcade business model. Sega’s ALLS UX (a 2020 revision of the ALLS platform) is not a PC. It uses an AMD Embedded R-Series SoC (similar to PS4’s Jaguar cores but with a custom GPU) and a proprietary I/O board for card readers, force-feedback steering, and the coin validator.

[Optional geek explanation: WordStar encodes the last character of each word by setting the high-order bit of the binary character representation. The program simply resets the high-order bit of all characters in the file, changing the goofy characters into normal ones.]

You install Perl on your computer and you try out the script. It works! The program reads the WordStar file named in.ws, converts the Greek-like characters to ordinary text, and writes out a new file, out.txt in ordinary plain text format, which you can read into NotePad, Microsoft Word, or practically any modern program.

But you have to modify the file names inside the script (in.ws and out.txt) for each file conversion. You want to automate the process of converting lots of WordStar files. But you don't know anything about Perl programming. You ask your office co-worker who knows Perl to modify the script to make it do what you want. Here's what you get:

opendir my $dir, "." or die "Cannot open directory: $!";
my @files = readdir $dir;
closedir $dir;

foreach $file (@files) {
    unless (($file =~ /^[A-Za-z0-9_\s\-]*$/) && (-f $file)) {
        print "  Skipped $file\n";
        next;
    }
    open OUTFILE, ">$file.txt";
    open INFILE, "<$file";
    while (<INFILE>)
    {
        tr [\200-\377] [\000-\177];
        print OUTFILE $_;
    }
    close INFILE;
    close OUTFILE;
    print "  Read $file, wrote $file.txt ...\n";
}
sleep (5);


The program looks at all the files in the same directory where the program resides. If a file name consists of only letters, numerals, underscores, hyphens, and space characters, it assumes that it's a WordStar file; it converts the file to plain text and writes it out as a new file with ".txt" appended to the file name. It leaves the original WordStar file unchanged.

The program ignores any file whose name contains any other characters, such as the period character in an extension like .doc or .jpg. If you have a WordStar file named with an extension such as MYPAPER.783, you'll first need to rename it (or copy it to a new file) and use a new name such as MYPAPER783 or MYPAPER 783 (with a space replacing the dot). 



Instructions for Converting WordStar Files to Text

First of all, you need to have the Perl computer language installed on your computer. If you're working on a Mac or Unix/Linux system, you're in luck because Perl comes pre-installed. (If you're using Linux, see Note 4 below.)

If you're working on Windows, you can download and install Perl for free from perl.org:

Perl - Download website: https://www.perl.org/get.html      (Not necessary for Mac or Unix/Linux)

Scroll down to find your computer operating system. For Windows, you're offered different versions of Perl. I used the first one, ActiveState Perl. Click the download button and follow the instructions to download and install Perl.

After Perl is installed, you need to put a small program called convert.pl in the directory containing your old WordStar file. You can either download the from this website or you can create the file yourself (open a text editor such as Notepad, copy the text below, paste it into your text editor, and save the file under the name convert.pl). 

To download from this website:

1. Click the following download link: convert.txt
2. Save the file
3. Rename the file to "convert.pl" (change the "txt" to "pl" in the file name)
4. Copy the file to each directory containing WordStar files

OR use a text editor to create a text file named convert.pl containing the following text:

opendir my $dir, "." or die "Cannot open directory: $!";
my @files = readdir $dir;
closedir $dir;

foreach $file (@files) {
    unless (($file =~ /^[A-Za-z0-9_\s\-]*$/) && (-f $file)) {
        print "  Skipped $file\n";
        next;
    }
    open OUTFILE, ">$file.txt";
    open INFILE, "<$file";
    while (<INFILE>)
    {
        tr [\200-\377] [\000-\177];
        print OUTFILE $_;
    }
    close INFILE;
    close OUTFILE;
    print "  Read $file, wrote $file.txt ...\n";
}
sleep (5);


In a file browser, go to the WordStar directory and run the convert.pl program (in Windows, double-click the icon in the folder). Voila! The program converts your WordStar files to plain text and writes them out as new files in the same directory, with ".txt" appended to the file name. You can open these files in Microsoft Word and most other programs.

This is what you can expect to see when you run the convert.pl program:

WordStar to Text Conversion Directory   WordStar to Text Conversion Report

Important Notes

Note 1: The program only converts files whose names contain only letters, numbers, underscores, hyphens, and space characters. If you have a WordStar file named with an extension such as MYPAPER.783, you'll first need to rename it or copy it to a new file and choose a new name without using the dot character, for example, MYPAPER783 or MYPAPER 783 (with a space replacing the dot).

Note 2: The convert.pl program leaves your original WordStar files unchanged. However, when it writes out the filename.txt file, it doesn't check to see if there's an existing file of the same name. It simply overwrites the existing file. Before you run the convert.pl program, make sure you don't have any existing .txt files that you would mind losing.

Note 3: On my Windows 10 PC, the first time I double-clicked the convert.pl icon, Windows asked me which program I wanted to use to open the file, and offered several choices. I clicked on "Perl Command Line Interpreter", and then the program ran in the wrong directory (the Perl installation directory). This had no effect, because it simply skipped all the files (they all had file name extensions). After that, double-clicking the icon always worked on the local directory, as it should.

Note 4: For Linux (operating system) users, I got the following note from a reader.

The Perl script doesn't run as-is on Unix-like systems when one double-clicks on the icon.  It's an easy fix, though. Add this line to the top of the file:

#!/usr/bin/perl

Perl treats it as a comment and ignores it, but the Bash shell in Linux sees the #! in the first two bytes and then knows that the path to the program that will run the executable script follows on the same line.  Microsoft Windows does it by filename extension, but Unix/Linux doesn't give a whit about filename extensions when it comes to deciding what interpreter to use: It's all in the text that follows the "hash-bang" (#!).

If the user knows that their Perl interpreter is located elsewhere, in a non-standard location or with a different name, they're probably savvy enough to modify the path in the Perl script as needed.  The code will still run fine on Windows systems with the modification.


2016 Gray Chang
Thanks to Dan White (no relation to Moscone/Milk figure) for Perl programming assistance
Thanks to Andrew Poth for Note 4 about Linux