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Windows · Free
GOM Audio 2.2.27.2
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Gom Player Audio Not Working - GOM Audio

Gom player audio not working usually means a codec issue, driver problem, or misconfigured output settings—and most of it's fixable in under five minutes.

The lightweight free audio player runs on Windows and handles MP3, FLAC, WAV, AAC, OGG, WMA, M4A, and APE files without fuss, but when sound cuts out, the culprit is rarely the software itself. Let's dig into what breaks it and how to get audio back.

Check Your File Format and Codecs

Not all audio formats play equally. While GOM Audio 2.2.27.2 supports the major codecs, some edge cases slip through.

Verify Format Compatibility

Open the file properties (right-click → Details) and confirm the format matches the player's supported list. MP3, WAV, and M4A almost always work. If you're playing FLAC or APE files, those need the right codec installed on your system.

Try playing a different MP3 file you know works. If that plays, the issue is file-specific, not player-wide.

Audio Device and Driver Issues

This is where gom player audio not working problems hide most often.

Update Your Audio Drivers

Windows relies on audio drivers to send sound to your speakers or headphones. Outdated drivers cause silent playback even in perfectly functional audio software.

Go to Device Manager (Windows + X, then select it), expand Sound, Video and Game Controllers, right-click your audio device, and choose Update Driver. Let Windows search online for the latest version. Restart after updating.

Check Output Device Settings

GOM Audio routes sound through Windows's default audio device. If you've plugged in USB headphones or an external speaker, it might be sending audio to a device that's powered off or unplugged.

Click the speaker icon in your system tray, check which output device is selected, and switch to the one you're actually using. The player should detect the change immediately.

GOM Audio Playback Configuration

Sometimes the software itself needs adjustment.

Reset Audio Settings

Open GOM Audio's menu and navigate to Preferences (or Settings). Look for an Audio or Output section. Check that the output device isn't muted or set to an invalid option. If it shows "None" or "Disabled," select your actual speakers or headphones.

Many users accidentally enable exclusive mode or turn off audio effects globally, which mutes playback. Disable exclusive audio mode if enabled—it can conflict with other Windows audio processes.

Equalizer and Effects Complications

The 10-band audio player equalizer and sound enhancement features can paradoxically cause silent playback if misconfigured. Try disabling all effects (set equalizer to Flat, turn off bass boost and treble control) and test playback. If sound returns, re-enable effects one at a time to find the culprit.

Pro Tip: GOM Audio has a hidden Reset to Default option buried in Preferences → Sound. This nukes all custom settings and solves 70% of audio quirks without uninstalling. It's faster than troubleshooting individually.

Alternative: Lightweight Audio Players Worth Testing

If the issue persists, it might be time to try another Windows music player. 1by1 offers stripped-down playback with minimal resource overhead. Dopamine provides a minimalist interface with its own 10-band equalizer. Both are free and handle standard formats without the complexity that sometimes trips up GOM Audio.

When to Reinstall

If none of this works, uninstall completely (Control Panel → Programs → Uninstall), restart Windows, then grab a fresh copy from the official source. Learn more about GOM Audio's official downloads to ensure you're installing the legitimate version.

Gom player audio not working is almost never permanent. Nine times out of ten it's drivers, output device selection, or a misplaced equalizer setting. Walk through these steps methodically and you'll have sound again.