From WiiBrew
 |
This page contains material which is kept because it is considered humorous. |
| en
| This user is a native speaker of English.
|
| This user has installed DVDX on their Wii.
|
| This user has installed BootMii on their Wii.
|
| This user owns 4 Wii Remotes.
|
| This user owns 4 Nunchuks.
|
| This user owns 1 Classic Controller Pro and 3 Classic Controller.
|
| This user owns a USB Keyboard.
|
| This user owns 1 Wii Balance Board.
|
| This user owns 3 Wii Wheels.
|
| This user owns 5 Wii MotionPlus units.
|
| This user owns 5 GameCube Controllers.
|
| This user uses Wi-Fi.
|
| This user owns a 2 GB SD card.
|
| This user owns 1 original Nintendo DS.
|
| This user owns 1 Nintendo DS Lite.
|
|
In addition to my moderate expertise with the Wii, I'm somewhat knowledgeable with regards to messing with iOS. I am willing to help... to an extent. I will either point and laugh or facepalm if you did something as stupid as deleting your System Menu's IOS. Or you updated your Wii through Nintendo because you need the latest and greatest version. Because that's just too stupid.
Story of my (Wii's) Life
Once upon a time, in an American, yet dictator-ruled, city, I had a near-launch Wii. Before BootMii was released, I made a few stupid moves and thought I bricked my Wii. (I believe now that I could have recovered if I had patience.) I sent it to United Radio (Nintendo's authorized NY repair facility), as I was convinced I couldn't do anything to repair it. My replacement came with System Menu 3.3 (sans October 23rd update) and boot1c (or, the f01e boot1). I was shocked, extremely happy, and extremely sad, for I could easily hack for homebrew. However, it also meant I am unable to install the beloved BootMii for brick protection.
And they all lived happily ever after.