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Mx Player Eac3 [repack] File

or simply No sound, but video plays fine.

If you have ever downloaded a high-definition movie or TV series (especially in MKV or MP4 format) and tried to play it on MX Player for Android, you might have encountered the dreaded error: mx player eac3

| Player | EAC3 Support | Hardware Acceleration | |--------|--------------|------------------------| | | ✅ Built-in | Good | | Nova Video Player | ✅ Built-in | Excellent | | Just Player | ✅ Built-in | Excellent (ExoPlayer) | | Kodi | ✅ Built-in | Good | or simply No sound, but video plays fine

MX Player + EAC3 = fixable in 2 minutes, but only if you know where to get the right codec. Have a favorite method that wasn’t mentioned? Let other readers know in the comments (if republishing on a blog). Let other readers know in the comments (if

"MX Player will never support EAC3." Truth: Unlikely, unless Dolby changes licensing terms or MX Player pays the fee — which would increase the app's price. Which Method Should You Choose? | If you… | Recommended solution | |----------|------------------------| | Want to keep MX Player at all costs | Install custom codec | | Just want quick playback | Switch to VLC or Nova | | Have time and need MX Player on multiple devices | Convert audio to AAC | | Use a modern TV box (Nvidia Shield, Mi Box) | Use Just Player or Kodi | Final Verdict MX Player remains an excellent video player — fast, gesture-rich, and stable. But EAC3 support is a legal/licensing gap, not a technical limitation .

"EAC3 only works on rooted devices." Truth: False. Custom codecs work on non-rooted Android.

Why? Dolby requires manufacturers and software developers to pay licensing fees for Dolby Digital decoding. To avoid those costs (and legal issues in some regions), MX Player ships without native AC3/EAC3 support.