Thus, converting MiniGSF to MIDI is less of a “transcode” and more of a workflow.
: It relies on a companion .GSFLIB file (usually in the same folder) which contains the heavy instrument samples.
: The first step is to understand the structure and syntax of MiniGSF. MiniGSF files typically contain musical notes, durations, tempo, and sometimes additional information like lyrics or chord progressions in a highly condensed form.