

- #WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT HOW TO#
- #WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT .DLL#
- #WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT ZIP FILE#
- #WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT CODE#
- #WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT DOWNLOAD#
This will create files with key values under the folders "private" and "shared" within the FE100 base folder.Ī. Those keys are specific to your Wii and present on every save file.Ħ. This step will add data to all but the last remaining fields in FE100KeyGrabber's GUI. Press the button: "Get stuff from a save file" and find the data.bin of any save file you copied to your SD card. Those came from this post at the HackMii blog and are the same on every Wiiĥ.

Sd-key: AB 01 B9 D8 E1 62 2B 08 AF BA D8 4D BF C2 A5 5D Run FE100KeyGrabber.exe and fill the following manually:
#WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT .DLL#
dll file so I did a search on my own computer, found a copy and pasted it on the FE100 folder.Ĥ. The first time I ran it I got an error stating I was missing some. That pages states: "Install Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 SP1 Redistributable Package x86" so you should probably do that.
#WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT DOWNLOAD#
Download and extract FE100 from the Wiki page. Either do one save file at a time so you don't get confused or refer to this page in the Wiki to identify your game (not all games are available).ģ.

Those title ID's are not very descriptive. The save data will be stored under \private\wii\title\XXXX\data.bin where XXXX is the title ID of the game you are saving from. I did my experiment with F-Zero (SNES) and Super Mario 64 (N64) and both worked perfectly.Ģ. Perhaps this and other specific game are copy-protected for whatever reason. Dream" (NES) save file as the "copy" button showed up as disabled. I was not able to copy the "Punch-Out Featuring Mr. Using the Wii Save Data Management Menu, copy your save file to an SD card. This post at GBATemp is what led me to the answer.īe sure to work on a copy of the save data and back up the original in case the file becomes corrupted and unusable.ġ. This way, you can continue your Virtual Console purchase games on an emulator launched from the HBC.
#WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT HOW TO#
The procedure below describes how to extract virtual console game save files to be used on any emulator. So far I have only tried this with SNES and N64 Virtual Console game files and it worked for the two I tried so it's not far-fetched to think that it will for most games. I did not invent any of this so credit goes to smart folks that created the tools. I asked about this on a recent post but did not get any replies so I did some research and figure it out (oh, the horror of actually working for something.). Keep in mind that if you already have a save on your Wii that you're trying to replace, it wont overwrite it, so you'll have to backup your save, then delete it off your Wii internal memory to be able to transfer the new one on.Quote This is my little contribution to the WiiBrew community. Once you have the file in place on your SD card, you can then put the SD card in to your Wii and go to your saved game(s) on your SD card (Wii Options > Data Management > Save Data > Wii > SD card tab), select the saved game that you want and select Copy. If you get a zipped file, it most likely has all of it's folder structure in tact, so all you have to do is extract it to your SD card so it shows up like the above folder structure.
#WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT CODE#
If you have a data.bin, you have to place it in a folder structure on your SD card like so: \private\wii\title\GAME\data.bin (replacing GAME with it's corresponding game code from the game code list). If this is the case, simply use Savegame Managerto transfer the save files.Īfter downloading a save, you'll either get a plain old data.bin or a zipped file. You may have trouble copying Samba de Amigo, The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, Super Smash Brothers Brawl, Mario Kart Wii, and other protected save files. So, you'll have to backup your save, delete it off of your Wii, and then transfer the new save file. Keep in mind that if you already have a save on you Wii that you're trying to replace, it won't overwrite it. Choose to Copy the file over to your Wii. Find the save game that you just copied over and select it. Open up the Wii Options, go to Data Management > Save Data > Wii. Once you have the save in place on your SD(HC) card, you can then put the card back into your Wii. It should show up similar to the following:
#WII SAVE GAME FILE FORMAT ZIP FILE#
If you have a zip file, it will most likely have the proper folder structure intact, so all you have to do is extract the zip file to your SD(HC) card. A list of those IDs can be found on the WiiSave Gamecodespage. You will need to change the word GAMEID to the proper game ID. If you have a data.bin file, you will need to place it in a folder on your SD(HC) card. Wii save files can be obtained from WiiSave.Īfter downloading a save, you will either have a data.bin or a zip file.
