While CSO was a breakthrough for the PSP circa 2007, it had a major flaw: decompression was slow. On the original PSP hardware (333MHz CPU), decompressing a CSO could cause stuttering during FMV cutscenes or heavy 3D sections.
In the world of emulation, especially for handheld devices like the PlayStation Portable (PSP), storage space is a precious commodity. While modern SD cards offer hundreds of gigabytes, retro game collections (PS1, PS2, and PSP ISOs) can quickly eat up every last megabyte. Enter the ISO to ZSO converter —a niche but powerful tool that promises better compression than standard ZIP or CSO, without the performance penalties. iso to zso converter
On Mac/Linux (Bash):
If you’ve ever stared at a 700MB PS1 ISO or a 1.6GB PSP ISO and wished you could cut it in half, this article is for you. We will explore what ZSO files are, why you should convert ISO to ZSO, the best tools for the job, and a step-by-step guide to doing it yourself. First, let’s establish the baseline. An ISO file (or ISO image) is an archive file that contains an exact copy (a "sector-by-sector" dump) of an optical disc—like a CD, DVD, UMD (PSP), or Blu-ray. While CSO was a breakthrough for the PSP