MP4 vs WebM vs MP3: Choosing the Right Format When You Download a Video
2026年2月18日
Every downloader eventually asks: MP4 or WebM? MP3, M4A, or WAV? The options exist for real reasons — here's what actually changes when you pick one over another.
MP4 — the safe default
MP4 (technically H.264/AVC video with AAC audio) plays on essentially everything — every phone, every TV, every editor, every browser, going back over a decade. Unless you have a specific reason to choose otherwise, MP4 is the right call. It's what Puliqo defaults to for a reason.
WebM — smaller files, narrower support
WebM (VP9 video, Opus audio) is Google's open alternative. At the same visual quality, a WebM file is often noticeably smaller than the equivalent MP4 — useful if you're archiving a lot of video and storage matters. The tradeoff: some older devices and most non-web video editors either don't support it or need a plugin. If the file needs to just play in a browser or on a modern phone, WebM is fine. If it's going into iMovie, an older TV, or a client's unknown setup, stick with MP4.
MP3 — universal audio
For audio-only downloads, MP3 is the MP4 of the audio world: it plays everywhere, including car stereos and a decade-old iPod. Pick a bitrate based on what you're saving:
- 128 kbps — fine for spoken word: podcasts, lectures, interviews.
- 192 kbps — a solid middle ground for casual music listening.
- 320 kbps — the ceiling for MP3; use it for music you actually care about the quality of.
M4A and Opus — when you want the original, untouched
YouTube and most platforms actually store audio as AAC (M4A) or Opus internally — MP3 is a conversion Puliqo performs for you on the way out. If you want the literal original audio stream with zero re-encoding, choose M4A or Opus instead of MP3. The file will be smaller or equal quality to an MP3 at the same perceptual quality, but slightly less universally supported (though virtually every modern phone and app handles both fine now).
WAV — only when you need to edit
WAV is uncompressed. A three-minute song in WAV can be 30+ MB versus 5–7 MB as a 320 kbps MP3, for no audible quality gain in most listening scenarios. The one real reason to choose it: you're importing the audio into editing software (Premiere, Audacity, a DAW) where you don't want any compression artifacts compounding through multiple edits and re-exports.
The short version
Video you'll watch or share: MP4. Video you're archiving in bulk and don't mind slightly narrower compatibility: WebM. Music you're keeping: MP3 at 320. Podcasts or voice: MP3 at 128–192. Editing audio: WAV. Want the truest copy possible: M4A or Opus.
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