Launch Adobe Director. Open Recovered.dir . You should see the full Score, Cast window, and Script windows populated with Lingo code.
Introduction: A Ghost from the CD-ROM Era Before the era of ubiquitous HTML5, WebGL, and high-speed broadband, there was Macromedia. For a generation of designers, developers, and CD-ROM publishers, Macromedia Director was the undisputed king of interactive media. It powered everything from point-of-sale kiosks and corporate training modules to viral web cartoons (think The Goddamn Geese ) and full-fledged video games.
When a Director developer wanted to distribute their creation without requiring the end-user to install the free Shockwave plugin or the Director player, they "projected" their .DIR or .DCR source file into a standalone executable: a (on Windows) or an .APP (on Macintosh).
Copy the Projector.exe to a dedicated folder. Note that some projectors rely on external folders called Xtras . The decompiler needs access to these to interpret custom codecs.
The tool will allow you to save a new .DIR file (e.g., Recovered.dir ). This file now contains the re-assembled source code.
The tools are old, the process is fiddly, and the legal lines are blurred. But for preserving art, recovering business logic, or simply satisfying curiosity, the Macromedia Projector EXE decompiler remains one of the most fascinating and useful tools in the reverse engineer’s toolkit.