Rarlab [work] -
WinRAR is . It has always been shareware. After a 40-day trial period, a nag screen appears, reminding you to buy a license. That is it. No crippling. No data deletion. No cloud subscription. Just a gentle, polite, infinitely dismissible window.
The first version is command-line only. Ugly. Brutalist. But engineers notice immediately: RAR compresses better than ZIP, especially on multimedia and executable files. It also introduces —treating multiple files as a single data stream for better ratios. That single feature alone makes RAR the choice for game warez groups, demo scene coders, and anyone distributing large files over 14.4k modems. The WinRAR Era: A GUI That Never Changed (And Never Had To) In 1995, Roshal’s brother, Alexander Roshal , joins the project. Alexander is the interface guy. He builds WinRAR —a graphical Windows shell that looks, functionally, exactly the same today as it did in 1996. rarlab
This is the story of how two engineers from a small town built an accidental empire on shareware, stubbornness, and one of the most efficient compression algorithms ever written. The year is 1993. The internet is still a dial-up screech. Hard drives are measured in megabytes. In Chelyabinsk, Russia—a city better known for tanks and heavy industry—a software engineer named Eugene Roshal begins writing a file archiver. WinRAR is
Memes: “I’ve been using WinRAR for 15 years. Should I pay?” Forums: “Does anyone actually buy WinRAR?” And the legendary tweet from a developer claiming their company had a 12,000-day trial period on a server. That is it
Rarlab’s official response to the meme status? Silence. They do not engage. They do not DMCA memes. They just keep updating WinRAR for Windows 11, ARM64, and the occasional security patch (remember the ACE vulnerability in 2019? That was a rare dark moment). As of 2025, WinRAR is at version 7.x. The changes are incremental: better RAR5 format, improved AES, support for Zstandard compression, and a dark mode (yes, it took 25 years). Rarlab’s website still looks like 1998. The download button is still honest.
By allowing anyone (including competitors) to include UnRAR in their software, Rarlab made .RAR a universal format. Every competing archiver—7-Zip, PeaZip, even macOS’s The Unarchiver—can extract RAR files. But only WinRAR can create them (outside of third-party reverse-engineered tools, which are legally shaky).