6: Next, put your SD card into the adaptor into Memory Slot A and run SDMediaLauncher. At the SD card menu, click the file 'snes9xGx201b8-sdslota.dol' that you copied earlier. --It'll bring you to the emulator menu. Click 'Choose Game'>'Load from SD Slot A'. You'll see the ROMS that you dumped into the 'SNESROMS' folder all listed there. 2GB SD Card Or MicroSD Card (SDHC Support In SD-boot 1.0) Orignal Gamecube Disc SD Card For Wii Gamecube Backup SD Card Reader Gamecube Controller Wii Or Gamecube third party gamecube memory card (for save file transfer to SD card)128MB GC Memory Card-----Software Requirements.
This is nice but not necessary. Everyone should have at least one wiimote if their gonna have a wii- facts of life these things go hand n hand.
As for the main menu? Ok so its dated that we can't use the gamecube controller- so what? Just use your wii mote, buy a lighter if your silly inferred thing does work- a lighter does the same thing.
Hold the bic/zippo lighter as far away from the wii mote as you can(don't cheap out on this one get a good one) and get the lighter going. Then point your wiimote to the lighter and select homebrew menu. There you go your welcome. You can just set up the usb loader gx forwarder to boot straight to usb loader gx, with nintendont in the apps folder, so that you can choose the game on the loader which will then boot up with nintendont.
I've uploaded the whole thing, I had to get a special usb loader gx so that it would load straight into nintendont instead of making you choose the game twice. In the priiloader menu (hold reset while turning on wii) install - ForwarderV5.1.dol Settings - installed file Now you can boot straight into the loader, choose a game, and it will run with nintendont. This is nice but not necessary.
Everyone should have at least one wiimote if their gonna have a wii- facts of life these things go hand n hand. As for the main menu?
Ok so its dated that we can't use the gamecube controller- so what? Just use your wii mote, buy a lighter if your silly inferred thing does work- a lighter does the same thing. Hold the bic/zippo lighter as far away from the wii mote as you can(don't cheap out on this one get a good one) and get the lighter going. Then point your wiimote to the lighter and select homebrew menu. There you go your welcome. If this isn't a troll post, it's a perfect example of a severe mental defect becoming more and more prevalent in society. Who are you to say what is and what isn’t necessary to someone else?
You’re no one. I’m not going to go into a list of scenarios in which one might not have (or may not want) the Wii’s ridiculous remote, but suffice it to say there are plenty of people out there who own a Wii solely to play Melee / Brawl / PM without having to change consoles. The beautiful thing about Priiloader is that it nullifies your statement that “everyone should have at least one wiimote if their gonna have a wii”. Your opinions on the facts of life notwithstanding, Priiloader allows Wii owners to play Melee without having to combat the excruciating minutia of menu navigation with the biggest joke of a controller in history. Priiloader wasn’t developed for owners who lost their Wii remote. It was developed for owners who despise this garbage controller. Its like I always say (yet forgot to say here, oops) do what you want.
But don`t bash nintendo- they did ok with the incoming bootup screen despite it sucking hard for restricting its access to wiimotes only. This may be the best system Nintendos ever made- its not what`s on the surface yet what`s underneath that a creative hacker finds where it turns into gold. In which the gold is made into things like project m in the first place. Wonder what the wii u or the 3DS will look like years later. This is nice but not necessary. Everyone should have at least one wiimote if their gonna have a wii- facts of life these things go hand n hand. As for the main menu?
Ok so its dated that we can't use the gamecube controller- so what? Just use your wii mote, buy a lighter if your silly inferred thing does work- a lighter does the same thing.
Hold the bic/zippo lighter as far away from the wii mote as you can(don't cheap out on this one get a good one) and get the lighter going. Then point your wiimote to the lighter and select homebrew menu. There you go your welcome. This is nice but not necessary.
Everyone should have at least one wiimote if their gonna have a wii- facts of life these things go hand n hand. As for the main menu? Ok so its dated that we can't use the gamecube controller- so what? Just use your wii mote, buy a lighter if your silly inferred thing does work- a lighter does the same thing. Hold the bic/zippo lighter as far away from the wii mote as you can(don't cheap out on this one get a good one) and get the lighter going. Then point your wiimote to the lighter and select homebrew menu.
There you go your welcome. For right now, I'm going to guess you are already hacked and have HBC installed(I'll go over unmodded Wii's near the end) 1)Go to and Download HackMii Installer v1.2. 2)Place the HackMii folder in your apps folder you use for HBC Ex: SD Root apps hackmii folder here. 3)Go to HBC and there should be an app without a logo, just blank, but when you go to open it, it should be titled HackMii.
4)As soon as you open it, an image should pop up stating 'THIS SOFTWARE MUST NOT BE SOLD' blah blah blah, some more scammed mumbo jumbo. It will stay on this screen for a good 20 seconds, just be patient. After some time, on the bottom, it'll state: 'Press 1 to continue' 5)You will be taken to some text saying ' The test results are in:' and 'The Homebrew Channel: Can be installed', 'BootMii: Can be installed'. Here you just wanna press continue. 6)You will be at the Main Menu(you can tell by the yellow letters at the top), go to 'BootMii.'
7)There are a lot of options here so listen(or read) carefully: Letters in Cyan are taken directly from the README-BootMii.txt. BootMii/boot2: This mode will install BootMii into 2 blank blocks in the boot2 area of your Wii. It will take over the function of the normal boot2. If no SD card is detected or armboot.bin is not found on the SD card, the drive slot LED will flash briefly and the normal system menu will boot. Pros: Independant of system menu and the rest of NAND flash.
Can boot even if the rest of the system is completely corrupted. Allows for safe backup / restore of NAND flash from SD card. Allows direct boot of The Homebrew Channel, or other programs. Cons: Relies on a vulnerability in boot1 that was fixed mid-2008; if your Wii is newer than this, the HackMii Installer will not allow you to install this form of BootMii. Installation is complicated and slightly risky; we have tested it and believe it to be safe, but a power failure at the wrong time during installation could leave your system unusable.
BootMii/IOS: This mode will install BootMii into your NAND filesystem as an IOS (IOS254). It behaves identically to BootMii/boot2, but you must launch it from a special program (The Homebrew Channel, or your own code.) Pros: Universal compatibility with all Wiis. Allows booting arbitrary code on ARM / PPC. Supports speedy backup of NAND to SD. Very safe to install.
Cons: Easily deletable or overwritten by a system update. NAND restore is technically possible, but not safe because you cannot boot to BootMii/IOS in case the contents of your NAND flash are corrupted. In Short: -BootMii/boot2: uses some files to skip from your SD card to skip into the special loader from when you start your wii where you can use your gamecube controller to navigate into the HBC(where you can also use your GameCube controller in case you didn't know).BootMii/iso: you need to be in your HBC channel to activate. You need to go through the original system menu, so duhhh. Not what we are trying to get done, it's counterintuitive. 8)You are going to choose 'Install BootMii as boot2' 9)Some menacing runtime warnings will show up about violating your SD card, assuming it's in your Wii, click on 'Yes, continue' 10)It'll write some files onto your SD card and ask you if you want to install BootMii/boot2 now, click on 'Yes, continue' once more.The files installed are in a folder on the root of your SD card under: SD Root bootmii.The bootmii folder is transferable, so you can put it in other SD's for your mods, so they as well can bypass system menu. 11)Some CMD prompts will show on screen writing and attacking those filthy NAND blocks 3 & 4, once it's done ' SUCCESS' should pop up, and click continue.
12)Hit 'Return to the main menu' 13)Hit 'Exit' 14)After reaching the HBC, turn off your Wii and turn it back on 15)The BootMii menu will pop up, going from left to right there are four options. 1 Most Left-Boot original Wii system menu. 2 Mid Left-Boot up to the HBC. 3 Mid Right-Load.dol from SD. 4 Most Right-BootMii settings. Unmodded Wii's: When following whatever guide you are reading to mod your Wii, when you are prompted to install HBC, install BootMii as well, so you have it from the Get-go.
You can load HackMii using Smashstacks as well, but sadly I never used Smashstacks so I have no experience there. As some added bonuses, if the bootmii folder necessary to load the menu isn't found or does not work in any way, the disc drive's LED will flash once and the original system menu will load. Also, this extra menu doesn't replace the old one so it gives you a recovery option, technically making your wii unbrickable. Letters in Orange are taken directly from to cite the second bonus above.
BootMii allows anything from Recovery modes (creating a practically unbrickable Wii), to lazy access of the. For example, if you have corrupted the, you can use to reinstall the. Unfortunately, all homebrew currently require an, because requires one. However, there is (a homebrew IOS-like software), which can be modified specifically for the program, ie, for better communication to the Linux kernel.
For right now, I'm going to guess you are already hacked and have HBC installed(I'll go over unmodded Wii's near the end) 1)Go to and Download HackMii Installer v1.2. 2)Place the HackMii folder in your apps folder you use for HBC Ex: SD Root apps hackmii folder here. 3)Go to HBC and there should be an app without a logo, just blank, but when you go to open it, it should be titled HackMii. 4)As soon as you open it, an image should pop up stating 'THIS SOFTWARE MUST NOT BE SOLD' blah blah blah, some more scammed mumbo jumbo. It will stay on this screen for a good 20 seconds, just be patient. After some time, on the bottom, it'll state: 'Press 1 to continue' 5)You will be taken to some text saying ' The test results are in:' and 'The Homebrew Channel: Can be installed', 'BootMii: Can be installed'. Here you just wanna press continue.
6)You will be at the Main Menu(you can tell by the yellow letters at the top), go to 'BootMii.' 7)There are a lot of options here so listen(or read) carefully: Letters in Cyan are taken directly from the README-BootMii.txt. BootMii/boot2: This mode will install BootMii into 2 blank blocks in the boot2 area of your Wii.
It will take over the function of the normal boot2. If no SD card is detected or armboot.bin is not found on the SD card, the drive slot LED will flash briefly and the normal system menu will boot.
Pros: Independant of system menu and the rest of NAND flash. Can boot even if the rest of the system is completely corrupted. Allows for safe backup / restore of NAND flash from SD card.
Allows direct boot of The Homebrew Channel, or other programs. Cons: Relies on a vulnerability in boot1 that was fixed mid-2008; if your Wii is newer than this, the HackMii Installer will not allow you to install this form of BootMii.
Installation is complicated and slightly risky; we have tested it and believe it to be safe, but a power failure at the wrong time during installation could leave your system unusable. BootMii/IOS: This mode will install BootMii into your NAND filesystem as an IOS (IOS254). It behaves identically to BootMii/boot2, but you must launch it from a special program (The Homebrew Channel, or your own code.) Pros: Universal compatibility with all Wiis. Allows booting arbitrary code on ARM / PPC. Supports speedy backup of NAND to SD.
Very safe to install. Cons: Easily deletable or overwritten by a system update.
NAND restore is technically possible, but not safe because you cannot boot to BootMii/IOS in case the contents of your NAND flash are corrupted. In Short: -BootMii/boot2: uses some files to skip from your SD card to skip into the special loader from when you start your wii where you can use your gamecube controller to navigate into the HBC(where you can also use your GameCube controller in case you didn't know).BootMii/iso: you need to be in your HBC channel to activate.
You need to go through the original system menu, so duhhh. Not what we are trying to get done, it's counterintuitive. 8)You are going to choose 'Install BootMii as boot2' 9)Some menacing runtime warnings will show up about violating your SD card, assuming it's in your Wii, click on 'Yes, continue' 10)It'll write some files onto your SD card and ask you if you want to install BootMii/boot2 now, click on 'Yes, continue' once more.The files installed are in a folder on the root of your SD card under: SD Root bootmii.The bootmii folder is transferable, so you can put it in other SD's for your mods, so they as well can bypass system menu. 11)Some CMD prompts will show on screen writing and attacking those filthy NAND blocks 3 & 4, once it's done ' SUCCESS' should pop up, and click continue. 12)Hit 'Return to the main menu' 13)Hit 'Exit' 14)After reaching the HBC, turn off your Wii and turn it back on 15)The BootMii menu will pop up, going from left to right there are four options.
1 Most Left-Boot original Wii system menu. 2 Mid Left-Boot up to the HBC. 3 Mid Right-Load.dol from SD. 4 Most Right-BootMii settings. Unmodded Wii's: When following whatever guide you are reading to mod your Wii, when you are prompted to install HBC, install BootMii as well, so you have it from the Get-go. You can load HackMii using Smashstacks as well, but sadly I never used Smashstacks so I have no experience there.
As some added bonuses, if the bootmii folder necessary to load the menu isn't found or does not work in any way, the disc drive's LED will flash once and the original system menu will load. Also, this extra menu doesn't replace the old one so it gives you a recovery option, technically making your wii unbrickable. Letters in Orange are taken directly from to cite the second bonus above.
BootMii allows anything from Recovery modes (creating a practically unbrickable Wii), to lazy access of the. For example, if you have corrupted the, you can use to reinstall the. Unfortunately, all homebrew currently require an, because requires one. However, there is (a homebrew IOS-like software), which can be modified specifically for the program, ie, for better communication to the Linux kernel. I have a pre-2008 Wii that let HackMii install BootMii (BootMii/boot2) without issue. Would it be possible to change my Wii so that it boots to the regular system menu instead of the BootMii menu?
It's nbd, I just miss turning my Wii on and being greeted by the familiar white screen instead of a boring gray one aha. EDIT: I realize that normal Wiis technically have the black warning screen before you press A to continue before the regular white system menu shows up, but.whatever lol. EDIT2: Now that I think about it, I recall my friend freaking out when I nearly removed his Wii's SD card straight after it booted up (when it was on the gray BootMii screen). Are there actually any risks involved with removing the SD card during that screen (he wasn't sure; he was just worried there would be)? If that is the case, would having my Wii boot to the regular white system menu remove those risks?
I have a pre-2008 Wii that let HackMii install BootMii (BootMii/boot2) without issue. Would it be possible to change my Wii so that it boots to the regular system menu instead of the BootMii menu? It's nbd, I just miss turning my Wii on and being greeted by the familiar white screen instead of a boring gray one aha.
EDIT: I realize that normal Wiis technically have the black warning screen before you press A to continue before the regular white system menu shows up, but.whatever lol. EDIT2: Now that I think about it, I recall my friend freaking out when I nearly removed his Wii's SD card straight after it booted up (when it was on the gray BootMii screen). Are there actually any risks involved with removing the SD card during that screen (he wasn't sure; he was just worried there would be)? If that is the case, would having my Wii boot to the regular white system menu remove those risks?
Contents. Unmodified Gamecube Game Save Exploits These require a memory card to place the hacked save game and a boot.dol converted to.gci format. Swiss is as a bootable GCI. Other. Hard to set up, can be annoying to load homebrew, but great if you have the materials to set it up. Requires previously formatted card ready for use with AR (Action Replay). Uses a region free bootdisc to load hombrew from included memory card device.
Offers out of the box homebrew support - always need the disc to boot it up. Comes with a flimsy!. Requires an original copy of and a. Modified Gamecube.
or Quick for booting backups and homebrew with a of. Quick to boot backups and homebrew with installed as plugin. Very quick to boot backups and homebrew with on flash. / Very quick to boot backups and homebrew with / on flash. / / Quick to boot backups and homebrew with.
Very quick to boot backups and homebrew with as /.