A wxd file extension is related to the Homeworld computer game and used for its musc resource game files.
Software that open wxd file
WXD file extension - Homeworld musc resource game
What is wxd file? How to open wxd files?
File type specification:
The wxd file extension is associated with the Homeworld, a real-time strategy computer game for Microsoft Windows operating system developed by Relic.
The wxd file stores musc resource game data.
This wxd file type entry was marked as obsolete and no longer supported file format.
This type of file is no longer actively used and is most likely obsolete. This is typically the case for system files in old operating systems, file types from long discontinued software, or previous versions of certain file types (like documents, projects etc.) that were replaced in higher versions of their original programs.
The default software associated to open wxd file:
Company or developer:
Relic Entertainment Inc.
Homeworld is a real-time strategy computer game developed by Relic Entertainment and published by Sierra Entertainment in 1999. In Homeworld, the inhabitants of a forsaken planet discovered an ancient tablet that revealed their true origins and launched them on a perilous voyage to their ancestral home, the far-distant world of Hiigara.
List of recommended software applications associated to the .wxd file extension
Recommended software programs are sorted by OS platform (Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android etc.)
and possible program actions that can be done with the file: like open wxd file, edit wxd file, convert wxd file, view wxd file, play wxd file etc. (if exist software for corresponding action in File-Extensions.org's database).
Unspecified and all other actions for computer programs working with wxd file - Homeworld musc resource game
Click on the software link for more information about Homeworld. Homeworld uses wxd file type for its internal purposes and/or also by different way than common edit or open file actions (eg. to install/execute/support an application itself, to store application or user data, configure program etc.).