Nintendo paid me to go to other people's place and "teach them" how to "connect their console to the internet". This is a weird story.-Patreon: www.notaponzi...
Holy shit! My time as a wii homebrew developer to shine haha.
SO, this is half myth half suspicion. On the wii, nintendo was able to update a part of the booting process called “boot2”. Boot2 can be considered like a kind of early program running while the system boots ( think of the windows logo you look at when booting your pc ).
The group of people who made the tools/programs that made it possible to run homebrew on the wii, called team twiizers or fail0verflow, said the code used to update that part of the system was unsafe and could brick wiis. Personally, i havent seen that code yet to verify, but i degress.
People read that, and took it as boot2 update == brick.
Come the wii’s 4.2 update ( i think it was 4.2 ), nintendo pushed a boot2 update (boot2v4) and it would install when the wii connected to the internet and checked for updates. This made people scared that it would brick, which resulted in what you think off.
Personally, i havent heard of any brick stories by the update ( besides people doing weird ass, unsafe, shit ). But without seeing the actual code from nintendo, it is possible i guess
But with that “reward” program its rather suspiscious to do such program. And generally in times like today, where every company wants to brick old game consoles to force them to play the more locked up newer console. But lets hope nintendos intension isnt that.
It wasnt, this was never their strategy and i doubt nintendo would ever go down that route. The reason they made the boot2 update was an (useless) attempt to overwrite the boot2 replacement team twiizers made (bootmii). If anything most of the wii updates were attempts to stop homebrew and backup loading/piracy which i cant say they were wrong in doing so.
The reward for users mightve been the functionality to store channels on an sd card, which was introduced in 4.0. Or maybe even the newer versions of the wiiconnect channels, that got updates and functionality over time. Or the wii shopping channel, so you could access the wiiware and vc channels (which needed latest channel version & ios’ installed )
This video is talking about 2010. The goal was likely to make it up through sales to users with newly connected Wiis who otherwise would have never made a digital purchase.
Holy shit! My time as a wii homebrew developer to shine haha.
SO, this is half myth half suspicion. On the wii, nintendo was able to update a part of the booting process called “boot2”. Boot2 can be considered like a kind of early program running while the system boots ( think of the windows logo you look at when booting your pc ). The group of people who made the tools/programs that made it possible to run homebrew on the wii, called team twiizers or fail0verflow, said the code used to update that part of the system was unsafe and could brick wiis. Personally, i havent seen that code yet to verify, but i degress.
People read that, and took it as boot2 update == brick.
Come the wii’s 4.2 update ( i think it was 4.2 ), nintendo pushed a boot2 update (boot2v4) and it would install when the wii connected to the internet and checked for updates. This made people scared that it would brick, which resulted in what you think off.
Personally, i havent heard of any brick stories by the update ( besides people doing weird ass, unsafe, shit ). But without seeing the actual code from nintendo, it is possible i guess
Thank you for your service o7
Oh no, ive been recognised ! Lol
Thanks for Priiloader! Still using it multiple times a week in 2023.
But with that “reward” program its rather suspiscious to do such program. And generally in times like today, where every company wants to brick old game consoles to force them to play the more locked up newer console. But lets hope nintendos intension isnt that.
It wasnt, this was never their strategy and i doubt nintendo would ever go down that route. The reason they made the boot2 update was an (useless) attempt to overwrite the boot2 replacement team twiizers made (bootmii). If anything most of the wii updates were attempts to stop homebrew and backup loading/piracy which i cant say they were wrong in doing so.
The reward for users mightve been the functionality to store channels on an sd card, which was introduced in 4.0. Or maybe even the newer versions of the wiiconnect channels, that got updates and functionality over time. Or the wii shopping channel, so you could access the wiiware and vc channels (which needed latest channel version & ios’ installed )
This video is talking about 2010. The goal was likely to make it up through sales to users with newly connected Wiis who otherwise would have never made a digital purchase.