KENZ is a high-performance offline compression engine built with Rust and Zstandard. Shrink large projects, backups, and file collections without uploading your data anywhere.
A lightweight compression engine designed for developers and power users.
Powered by Rust and Zstandard for efficient, high-speed local compression.
Your files stay on your machine. No cloud uploads. No tracking.
Designed for large projects, source code repositories, and thousands of files.
Real compression tests from large development and data directories.
67% smaller archive
80% smaller archive
Click the project folder to simulate the high-speed Zstd compression engine in real-time.
Explore the low-level architecture driving KENZ's lightning-fast local operations.
Bypass tedious system file picker menus. Drop massive developer project folders directly anywhere into the active window frame to capture and map paths instantly.
A beautifully optimized dark palette engineered to reduce eye strain during late-night code archiving sessions. High contrast, sharp text, and zero UI stutter.
Prefer crisp day rendering? Toggle instantly into a clean, fully light-mapped dashboard environment designed for daylight visibility without changing assets.
Switches between workspace interface languages natively. Instantly maps and renders every single label cleanly across comprehensive English, French, and Arabic setups.
Track your data footprint metrics live. Compute exact compression ratios, storage saved over time, and active engine worker processing benchmarks instantly.
Open fallback compatibility built natively. Packages compress in sequentially unrolled structures, ensuring anyone can view or extract them via standard WinRAR instantly.
Never sit staring at a progress bar. Receive immediate local popups and audio system toasts when a heavy multi-gigabyte compression pipeline finishes writing to storage.
No unnecessary steps or nested menus. Drop, tweak, and carry on with your workflow.
Bypass tedious system file pickers entirely. Drag your heavy workspace folders straight into the dashboard loop interface to instantly map the file layout tree.
Fine-tune your output target with a slider. Dial it down to Level 1 for lightning-fast archiving speeds, or max it out to Level 22 for ultra-dense, maximum disk space recovery.
Hit compress and immediately switch back to your editor or regular tasks. The multi-threaded core runs silently in the background and drops a system notification the second it finishes.
Take a closer look at the minimal, native interface built to handle your heavy storage workflows.
No monthly SaaS drains. No mandatory cloud accounts. Pay once, use locally forever.
One-time payment. Zero recurring subscriptions.
Full permanent usage of the native Kenz desktop engine binaries.
Instant access to every upcoming optimization build layer without paying again.
Activates directly on your machine with zero remote cloud handshakes required.
Everything you need to know about the Kenz engine, licenses, and local operations.
It is a true one-time purchase. When you buy Kenz, you receive a license key to activate your local desktop binary permanently. There are absolutely no monthly SaaS fees, cloud subscription traps, or recurring transaction cycles.
Never. Kenz is built with a strict local-first, zero-knowledge architecture. It operates entirely offline inside your local system limits, with all processing executed directly on your hardware. Your files and code never touch the cloud.
Standard ZIP compression is single-threaded and heavily bottlenecked. Kenz leverages native Rust bindings to run parallel multi-threaded Zstandard (ZSTD) pipelines. It compresses your heavy developer directories and node_modules up to twice as fast, with significantly higher compression ratios and a lower memory footprint.
Yes! While Kenz uses an optimized pipeline to pack directories locally, the output formats are designed to maintain standard sequential structures. You can easily extract your compressed projects on any system using common software like WinRAR, 7-Zip, or Kenz itself.
Absolutely. Because Kenz limits its processing stream chunk-by-chunk to avoid RAM spikes, you can hit compress on a massive 28 GB folder and keep writing code, running local servers, or compiling builds in the background without experiencing system stutters.