No they are not. Any homebrew could crash anytime for any reason and if it was in a writing process while it did, some sectors or your whole exFAT card will be corrupted.Most of this issues within the Switch scene are just end user mistakes.
No they are not. Any homebrew could crash anytime for any reason and if it was in a writing process while it did, some sectors or your whole exFAT card will be corrupted.Most of this issues within the Switch scene are just end user mistakes.
No they are not. Any homebrew could crash anytime for any reason and if it was in a writing process while it did, some sectors or your whole exFAT card will be corrupted.Most of this issues within the Switch scene are just end user mistakes.
card corruption can vary on brand as well. You might be facing issues with exfat but mine hasn't had 1 fabric of a problem since the day I received my sxos last year of July. From nand dumping, key dumping, Choi updates, using cheats, ftp, and layerdfs. Homebrew is never meant to be crash stable tbh especially emulation, plugins can always go wonky at any given time regardless what you use. Typically any drive crashing while writing data can be corrupted thats not necessarily exclusive to exfat. I had that problem with my ps3's internal hdd during a storm when the power went out installing a game.No they are not. Any homebrew could crash anytime for any reason and if it was in a writing process while it did, some sectors or your whole exFAT card will be corrupted.
Of course polls lie. Discounting actual lying, if someone voted months ago that they had no problems, but have since had problems, you can bet they haven't come back and updated their vote.Polls don't lie. You are just exFAT hater...
New poll, because you are right, those results were inconclusiveOf course polls lie. Discounting actual lying, if someone voted months ago that they had no problems, but have since had problems, you can bet they haven't come back and updated their vote.
It's already showing 28% of exfat respondents having issues vs 8% of fat32 respondents, that's significant by any measure.New poll, because you are right, those results were inconclusive
with all this file system corruption, why is their no homebrew file system scan/fixer? If SX os was an actual operating system it would be managing the file system. you dont see file system corruption in the switch offical os FAT32 data partition do you.....
All you need to do is reformat your SD card. Make sure to backup the contents before doing so.I have a exfat install on a 7.0 firmware with no fuses burned. What is the correct way of migrating to fat32? Do i just reformat my sdcard to fat32 or do I have to reinstall my firmware?
I have a exfat install on a 7.0 firmware with no fuses burned. What is the correct way of migrating to fat32? Do i just reformat my sdcard to fat32 or do I have to reinstall my firmware?
It's already showing 28% of exfat respondents having issues vs 8% of fat32 respondents, that's significant by any measure.
Buying them on eShop?Ok I have a question for those who use FAT32. What exactly are you supposed to do in order to get a big ass game like MK11 installed on your switch? Since files have a 4GB limit. How would you split those nsp or xci files? That's my only issue/concern that I've had to deal with and why I use exFAT. Mind you as well. I've only had issues running the PPSSPP emulator via RetroArch. Anything else that I run works well for me.
Ok I have a question for those who use FAT32. What exactly are you supposed to do in order to get a big ass game like MK11 installed on your switch? Since files have a 4GB limit. How would you split those nsp or xci files? That's my only issue/concern that I've had to deal with and why I use exFAT. Mind you as well. I've only had issues running the PPSSPP emulator via RetroArch. Anything else that I run works well for me.
USB install or split nsp. No problem.