Copy ds games


















I am really new on 3DS itself and i have read so many guides about it but i couldn't find the exact thing that i was looking for. Basically i want to import my emulator pokemons that in Platinum save to legit Black 2 cartridge and from there to newer generations.

The save files contains the distribution pokemons that this website posted and i really really thank you for those My 3DS is brand new and never cracked. I'd really appreciate it because i don't even know where to start..

Thank you. Twilight91 likes this. Anything you have migrated from Gen 1 to 3 is not legit, just so you know. I just be careful online and only play my legit games and never use homebrew apps when the 3ds is connected to the internet, theirs obviously some risk there though.

Simply scroll to the top of this page and follow my tutorial. Hopefully that gets you started anyway I think you will enjoy your 3DS for Pokemon as with hacks it's capable of playing all the core games from Gen 1 to 7. InsaneNutter , May 13, Thank you for your respond I tried to keep gen pokemons legit as possible with their iv and ev stats, went on and studied the gen 3 system and did cross multiplications from gen to 3. When i did that gen games wasn't even on 3ds yet so i did that a while ago So back on topic, currently the pokemons i want to transfer to a legit copy is in a Platinum rom.

Turns out i have to finish Black 2 in order to get those pokemon from platinum to black 2 save and this tutorial shows how to backup the save files and restore them. But my question is do i need to hack into the cartridge as well to modify saves? And if i do that would that get me banned later? You would restore your Platinum save game to the Platinum cartridge and the Black 2 save to the Black 2 cartridge or start a game and finish it on the Black 2 cartridge When you finish the Gen 5 games you unlock the Poke Transfer Lab on Route When you visit that your Black 2 game will send a program via the DS download play application, on your other DS with your Platinum game in you will select download play on the homescreen to load the transfer app.

This allows Pokemon to transfer from Gen 4 to Gen 5 over Wireless using 2x consoles. You don't need to hack your DS games, save edit or anything, you simply need to restore the save games to your DS game cartridges. The only thing you need any sort of hacks for is to have an easy way of getting your emulator saves on to the DS game cartridges.

I personally think using hacked 3DS is the most easy way of doing this in although other ways do exist.

If you just want to back up and play your Nintendo DS games and don't really care about emulation, media playback, or other fancy features, the Acekard2i is for you. It's a solid cartridge, it has a development community behind a robust cart-specific operating system called akAIO, and for basic playback as well as homebrew-based emulation you'll be just fine. If you want to back up and play your DS games and use enhancements like cheat codes, real-time saving, as well as playing games in emulation like Gameboy Advance and SNES games, and you'd like to enable movie and music playback, the SuperCard DSTwo is for you.

Once you get your flash cartridge in the mail, you'll need to load and update their software. The process differs between the two carts we're covering, so if you've got the Acekard2i, go here ; if you bought the Supercard DSTwo, jump ahead to here. After this setup, the instructions are the same for both. Setting Up the Acekard2i: Download the Acekard21 loaders.

Extract it to the root of your micro SD card. Download the WiFi update. Your games will go here once you've backed them up. If you intend to use the Acekard2i in a Nintendo DSi that is has been updated to menu version 1.

Download the Acekard2i update for the 1. Extract the contents to the root of your SD card. You cannot update the flash cart from a DSi unit with system menu 1. When it is in a compatible DS unit launch the Acekard flash cart like a game and navigate to the root of your micro SD card. Even though the update takes under 30 seconds, plug your NDS into the wall to play it safe so you don't lose power at a critical moment. Once you're done setting up up the flash cart—whether you had to update for menu 1.

Run the "game" and you'll be greeted with the akAIO menu as seen below. Now you're ready to set up your DS for game backups, so skip the SuperCard DSTwo setup below and jump straight to the instructions for setting up your Nintendo DS for game backups below.

You'll pay almost twice as much for the SuperCard DSTwo over the Acekard2i, but the increase in price also increases the ease of setup, and the bonus of some really cool in-game cheats and hardware emulation. Extract the contents to the root of your micro SD card. It already comes updated for system menu 1. At this point, regardless of which cartridge you picked, you're now ready to play NDS backups.

The problem is we don't have any backups yet, so we need to grab some of our game cartridges and create some. Before we can start backing up our games, however, we need to do a quick setup.

From this point forward the guide is flash cart agnostic. Unless explicitly noted all instructions apply to any flash cart. At this point you'll need your Nintendo DS or DS Lite, your wireless router, the game cartridges you want to back up, and a computer to back them up to.

We'll be using a Windows 7 PC. First, configure your router. Unfortunately Nintendo never really got on the secure-wireless bandwagon when it came to the Nintendo DS line. If you're running your wireless access point wide open, you're all set. If you're using encryption stronger than WEP you'll have to temporarily crank it down to old-school—and insecure —WEP security. You can change it back as soon as you're done backing up your games. Second, make sure your NDS can connect to the wireless router.

If you have a Wi-Fi-enabled game start the game and use it to configure your wireless settings—the NDS and NDS Lite lack a system-menu option for configuring it without a game. If you don't have a game with Wi-Fi play that would allow you to configure things, that's okay. The closest thing might be the NDS Adapter Plus , but that supports only reading and writing save files, not the games themselves.

However, it has been a few years. Perhaps you could manage to get a DS these days -- they are much cheaper now. If you do that, then you will still need a flash cart of some kind to run a custom program to copy the cartridge, not to mention the cartridge itself. This gbatemp forum thread has instructions for various dumping setups.

In my case, it was an M3 Perfect slot2 flash cart using wood dumper slot2. Run the dumping application from your flash card, insert your new Pokemon Black cartridge, push the button, and with luck you will have a copy of your game. I don't think this copies save files, though, so if you want to do that too you'll have to find another tool for that -- but there is hardware to do it. You can then copy the dumped. NDS file and play it in your emulator of choice.

You might need to clean up the dumped ROM, though, as in my experience it tends to copy too much data effectively, garbage. Of course, if you did all of this, then you already have the game you want to play and a Nintendo DS But nothing stops you from playing the copy in an emulator. Sign up to join this community.

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