The Problem Nobody Was Solving Let's be honest about something. Video conversion on Windows has been broken for years — and the software industry has been perfectly comfortable letting it stay that way. You download a movie or a clip in MKV format. You double-click it. Nothing plays. Or the video plays but there is no audio. Or the subtitles are missing. So you go searching for a converter. What you find is a graveyard of sketchy websites with fifteen fake "Download" buttons, tools from 2010 with interfaces that look like they were designed during the Internet Explorer era, and "free" software that slaps a giant watermark across your finished video and then asks you to pay $49 a year to remove it. The premium options are not much better. Most charge monthly subscriptions for features that should have been standard a decade ago. Others quietly install browser toolbars or phone home with your usage data. And if you want something like HEVC / H.265 support or 4K UHD output on Windows?…