Amici said:
Wait so what really is the truth? Is the firmware really that bad?
Please do not listen to RedBaron. He is merely a trashy troll that needs to be disposed of, being the little kid that he is, whining about how the Supercard Team has not lived up to his full expectations.
The firmware is not bad at all. It has a nice and smooth GUI that is somewhat very easy to use. If you need help imagining the GUI, go
here and flash over your mouse over "Quick Preview."
Other than the fantastic GUI, the SCDS2 comes with many features, such as the In-Game Menu, near-perfect game compatibility, and several other good plug-ins.
First of all, the
In-Game Menu allows you to enter a quick menu in ANY game by pressing the specified buttons (in this case, the firmware that you will have just downloaded has set the Hot Key (buttons to bring up the In-Game Menu) to L+R+(some other button). You press the specified buttons and will see several other features, which are Real-Time-Save/Load, Real-Time-Game-Guide, Slow Motion, Real-Time-Cheat, and Free Cheat.
-Real-Time-Save/Load enables you to save at ANY point in ANY game and load that save file ANYTIME.
-Real-Time-Game-Guide enables you to access .txt files for a specific game that you copied-pasted a guide for.
-Real-Time-Cheat enables you to use cheat codes for DS games ANYTIME.
-Free Cheat is a unique feature that is only available to the DSTWO. It allows you to search up and modify code values. Free Cheat is merely a "shortcut" for quick cheat codes.
-Slow Motion is pretty much self-explanatory.
Second of all, the
DSTWO Game Compatibility will absolutely amaze you. Every new game that I've tried so far only have a few problems, none that are major, so I'll say that the Compatibility is around (99.5%, IMO). This is also another reason why the DSTWO is the best flash cart out there. Plus, updates to the EOS and patches for popular games are pretty frequent, or at least, used to be, but I'm pretty sure it's because of the release of the DSTWO SDK.
And finally...
DSTWO plug-ins. These plug-ins are also known as the "SNES Emulator, GBA Emulator, iReader, iPlayer," and many others. Here's a
link to the descriptions of the plug-ins.
I'm not really sure about the SNES Compatibility, because I've never really used the Emulators that much. Though, the SNES Compatibility for the DSTWO SNES Emulator isn't that bad. Since the DSTWO SDK is out, I'm pretty sure that the SNES Emulator will receive unofficial updates that will drastically change the Compatibility for it, along with the GBA Emulator, I guess.