Your Aseprite files, on your phone.
AseVee is a native Android viewer for .ase and .aseprite files. No need to export to PNG or GIF before checking your work on mobile — open the file directly and see your sprite exactly as Aseprite renders it.
── FEATURES
Everything you need to preview your work:
🖼 Native .ase rendering
Reads the binary format directly — no conversion required
Toggle layers visibility (premium)
Tag navigation (premium)
🔍 Pixel-perfect zoom
Nearest-neighbor scaling
Pinch to zoom
Double-tap to fit or 1:1
🎬 Animation playback
Plays your frames at their exact timing
Animation looping (premium)
🎨Custom background
Black, white, checkerboard, or your own image
📺 Android TV compatible
Full D-pad navigation
Tag navigation (premium)
*requires a compatible file browser or Studio Mode for remote transfer
⌚ Wear OS
Send your animation to your watch in one tap (premium)
🔒Zero data collection
No analytics, no account, no servers. Your files never leave your device.
── PREMIUM
⭐ Unlock the full workflow:
This Aseprite viewer is free to use.
Premium is a one-time purchase that unlocks the professional features.
- Animation looping
- Tag navigation
- Layer visibility control
- Export frame as PNG
- Send to Wear OS watch
── FOR DEVELOPERS
Built for the pixel art workflow, using our Studio mode:
📡 ADB support
Push files directly via adb and open them instantly in Aseprite Viewer.
Perfect for CI pipelines or TV devices without a file manager.
🔌 Aseprite extension included
Install the companion extension in Aseprite and send your current file to your Android device in one click — no manual file transfer needed.*
* requires adb
🤝 Share frame with your team for comments and requests
── MISSING FEATURES
Please be aware some features are still missing for now
- blending
- tiled mode
These ones require a lot of work and, if ever added, will be included in the premium version.
── ABOUT
AseVee is an independent app built by a developer for developers and pixel artists. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by Aseprite.
The Aseprite file format specification is public and open — AseVee implements its own parser from scratch. No code from the Aseprite source was used.
Thanks to KiyoZ and Boldo for the sprites used on the screenshots.