The 3ds version got me frustrated when I got to the part that lets you go to hell I'm pretty sure I did everything needed for the door to be opened but it wouldn't open ><
quick question, what file exactly did he download?
Also my advice is it would probably be much easier for him if he used sakura
http://filetrip.net/f4374-M3-Sakura-TouchP...-3rd-4-7cX.html
It's the successor to moonshell created by the programmer moonlight... basically its a media manager for flash cards, version 2 being based heavily on the design for sakura (which he apparently got stiffed on paymentwise by g6/m3)
lookup goomba color for adding that support to a flash card, it's a gba gameboy/supergameboy/gameboy color emulator
http://www.dwedit.org/gba/goombacolor.php
Ironicly the next biggest chunk of their user base probably is pedophiles...
Anyway I hope they come up with some support for some sort of gba/gbc/gb virtual console
Yeah it does some really bad things to super mario advance 4 and mario vs donkey kong (j) saves, causing it to erase the e-reader levels :/
And I agree, Lionati reads like someone begging for the smite of the ban-hammer.
Super Mario Land 2
Wario Land: Super mario Land 3
Street Fighter Alpha
Super Mario Bros Deluxe (Still a good game even if they butchered the physics)
The legend of zelda Links awakening
The legend of Zelda Oracle games
Looney Tunes
I still have most of them
NES Not sure if it will work
SNES, works
N64 works
Virtual boy should work
GBC works
GBA works
SP one of them has a bad shoulder button
NDS has a sometimes troublesome shoulder button
GCube works fine
Wii works fine
DS lite had the mic replaced, had the shoulder get...
King of the Fighters Pretty much all of them as well
SVC Chaos is another good one
Haven't had any of luck getting the Samurai Showdown series working unfortunately.
I think there is a better chance they will mount cannons like the ones in nsmb wii on the shelves in stores that will fire out wiis at customers then nintendo would consider trying something like that
For example, a 21-inch (diagonal) GE color television in 1965 had an advertised price of $499, which is equal to $4,724 in today's dollars, according to the federal government's inflation calculator.