mainnine said:anyone?
What if you were to lose the original wad files that you installed, but then removed through the Wii options? Is there any way at all to remove the ticket? Like a browser for tickets on the console?FenrirWolf said:The ticket is like a record that the title in question was installed. For example, it's what lets you delete a VC game using the system menu and then download it from the shop channel again without having to rebuy it. If you were to remove that ticket then you would be prompted to purchase the game if you tried to redownload.
So it's generally a better idea to remove added wads with Wad Manager so you don't leave stray tickets around.
Only displays numbers and not names? Crap....elfsander said:AnyTitle deleter does the trick
HUELEN10 said:But it leaves tickets doesn't it? What is the worse that could happen anyways? Seriously, I want to know.Smartpal said:I erase them with the system menu. Worrks just fine.
Damn, well then I would love to erase tickets, but if it shows numbers instead of names, it seems to be pretty hopeless. Thanks anyways...Det1re said:HUELEN10 said:But it leaves tickets doesn't it? What is the worse that could happen anyways? Seriously, I want to know.Smartpal said:I erase them with the system menu. Worrks just fine.
Tickets are left, ya. If you have much of them, they start reducing your open blocks size... slightly. Let it be 1 Block for 16 Tickets... But another fact is, that Tickets are like Traces. If you want to send Nintendo the console for repair you would mostly want to uninstall the HBC for security. If you do it through the sysmenu, they'll be able to see the "HAXX" ticket. So they know, you had installed HBC...
What I forgot: Erasing the Ticket keeps you NAND clean.
snakesnoke said:After this I have only the disc channel left. My system menu still says version 3.2e and the wii seems to be working fine.