Yes use fat32 even on stock switchI.e. FAT32 vs. exFAT.
The question should be posed to you; what possible advantage of formatting the drive exfat? Installers split the large files.I.e. FAT32 vs. exFAT.
no not a problem , for me anyway , always been on exfat 256gb , just make sure your memory card is legitI.e. FAT32 vs. exFAT.
For one atmosphere does not support it as it causes problemsBut who has actually encountered a problem? I use exfat and have done always. My friends all use exfat. Not a single one of us has ever had any problems, whatsoever.
I won't cliam to know much about the topic, so my question is genuine. I always hear people say exfat is a really bad idea, but at the same time I don't think I've heard of anyone actually having problems with it.
This is the sort of thing I'd like to have explained a bit deeper. People always just type this sort of thing. I've used Atmosphere since RCM became a thing. What problems does it cause?For one atmosphere does not support it as it causes problems
It do support exfat as long as you have exfat installed?For one atmosphere does not support it as it causes problems
If a crash occurs on FAT32, it might corrupt whatever file it was writing to, if a crash occurs on ExFAT, it's likely to corrupt your entire card if it was writing to it at that moment. Maybe you've been lucky enough to not experience crashes so far, but they can happen even on OFW. When Pokemon Sword/Shield came out SciresM did a writeup about a bug in the game that caused full system crashes, and if you had autosaving enabled in the game, it was likely to crash during the autosaving, potentially corrupting your card, regardless of whether you played the game legit on OFW, or pirated it.But who has actually encountered a problem? I use exfat and have done always. My friends all use exfat. Not a single one of us has ever had any problems, whatsoever.
I won't cliam to know much about the topic, so my question is genuine. I always hear people say exfat is a really bad idea, but at the same time I don't think I've heard of anyone actually having problems with it.
Read above.This is the sort of thing I'd like to have explained a bit deeper. People always just type this sort of thing. I've used Atmosphere since RCM became a thing. What problems does it cause?
That would be even worse, because NTFS is proprietary and there are no official specifications released. Even Linux' NTFS drivers aren't perfect. NTFS also isn't optimized for flash storage.For SD Cards I only use exfat card for game dump backups nuff said
HDD Exfat is fine so load installs from it
This won’t change
Nintendo just add ntfs support plz
Thanks
i still persist in using exfat not fat32, sometimes use another fat32 sdcard for cheat data searching. but i don't think nintendo will add ntfs support maybe they consider sdcard is flashdisk not HDD。For SD Cards I only use exfat card for game dump backups nuff said
HDD Exfat is fine so load installs from it
This won’t change
Nintendo just add ntfs support plz
Thanks
First ever actual explanation I've seen. Thanks.If a crash occurs on FAT32, it might corrupt whatever file it was writing to, if a crash occurs on ExFAT, it's likely to corrupt your entire card if it was writing to it at that moment. Maybe you've been lucky enough to not experience crashes so far, but they can happen even on OFW. When Pokemon Sword/Shield came out SciresM did a writeup about a bug in the game that caused full system crashes, and if you had autosaving enabled in the game, it was likely to crash during the autosaving, potentially corrupting your card, regardless of whether you played the game legit on OFW, or pirated it.
This actually happened to people, which is how the bug was discovered to begin with.
Crashes are rare on OFW, true, but they happen quite commonly on CFW, all it takes is a buggy or misconfigured piece of homebrew, leaving behind old files in the Atmosphere folder when updating, or inserting a game cart when you have a mismatched game cart FW. So it's especially important when using CFW to avoid ExFAT because the risk is 10x greater that your card will end up corrupted sooner or later.
Read above.
That would be even worse, because NTFS is proprietary and there are no official specifications released. Even Linux' NTFS drivers aren't perfect. NTFS also isn't optimized for flash storage.