Homebrew Gamecube Emulator

Homebrew 'Launchers' (Softmod) When you don't have a disc in your Gamecube it launches the authentic BIOS, which has the date and time, a memory card manager, and can launch games. The homebrew launchers are in the category of 'BIOS-like thing'.

  1. Homebrew Gamecube Emulator
  2. 3ds Homebrew Gamecube Emulator
  3. Gamecube Emulator For Homebrew 3ds
  4. Homebrew Gamecube Emulator For Wii
  5. Gamecube Emulator For Homebrew
  6. Homebrew Gamecube Emulator Wii

You can use Wii Homebrew Launcher to load GameCube homebrew. To do this, copy the EMULATOR directory at the root of the SD card and copy your homebrew in /EMULATOR/GCUBE/ROMS. In Wii Homebrew Launcher, go to Emulator channel, select 'GameCube Homebrew' channel and select the homebrew to load. Gamecube games can be installed in your Wii U System Menu and played with the gamepad, a unique features with custom firmware that is unavailable in the vWii application. USB Helper will not download Gamecube games. You must provide the ISO file and USB Helper will make it possible to to the Wii U Menu. Gamecube Mod - Homebrew, Rip Games, Emulators with no Modchip Required!! The world of Gamecube homebrew is amazing,with tons of amazing homebrew available an. GameCube 'emulator' Crediar, FIX94 O2em: Odyssey 2 /Videopac Consolius PCSX-Revolution: Playstation 1 Firnis SMSPlus: Sega Master System and Game Gear eke-eke Snes9x GX: Super Nintendo Tantric, michniewski StellaWii: Atari 2600 Nuvalo VectrexWii: Vectrex Aruskano: Wii2600: VCS/2600 Raz0red: Wii64: Nintendo 64 tehpola, sepp256, emukidid Wii7800.

100% Unofficial GameCube Homebrew

The purpose of Hombrew, simply put, is to get your Gamecube to run stuff that Nintendo didn't intend it to run.

This guide is intended for people who know how to use a computer,but who don't know the first thing about GameCube mods.

Particularly, it's for people who have come across posts like'Please Explain Like I'm Five: How do I get Game Boy Interface to run on my Gamecube??',read the answers, and thought 'okay... well maybe explain it to me like I'm three then...'.

This will answer your questions, though I can't guarantee you'll like the answers.

You can't download or burn it. You're going to have to buy or borrow at least one of these:

  • Option A) The CodeJunkies (Datel) Action Replay SD Media Launcher disc (Softmod)
    • $31.50 on CodeJunkies.com (SD Medial Launcher)
  • Option B) Gamecube Memory Card pre-loaded with Swiss (Softmod)
    • $34.00 on ebay (Wind Waker Hack)
  • Option C) XenoGC (Hardware mod) + Laser Tuning
    • $5.00 on Amazon
    • $2.50 - $7.50 on ebay
    • Note: The official 'NickDisk' will work without laser tuning in most systems
      • $10.00 on eBay.com (Swiss Boot Disc only)
      • $18.00 on eBay.com (Swiss Boot Disc + SD2SP2 SD Adapter)
  • Option D) The other Dolphin console
    • (not covered here b/c there are 100s of tutorials on this already)

Some other things you'll want/need:

  • SD Gecko (Memory Card SD Adapter) (Amazon) (ebay)
  • SD2SP2 (SD to Serial Port 2 Adapter) (Amazon) (ebay)

And here's my Ultimate GameCube Homebrew shopping list:

Covered in this tutorial:

Not covered in this tutorial:

SD Creator Script

I created a script to automate the process of creating a proper SD card on macOS:

At the beginning of this year (before the announcement)I decided that I wanted to show off Link's Awakening tomy wife on the TV, using the GameBoy Player.

Rather than pay $120+ on ebay to getthe Game Boy Player with the Startup Disc, I thought I'd getjust Game Boy Player for about $30 instead.

I bought that, but then it wasn't until about a month agothat I finally visited my parents and dug my Gamecube out of the garage.

Homebrew gamecube emulator wii

Then I just kept going further and further down the rabbit hole...

The first thing that you've got to understand about 'Homebrew' is that there's no such thing as Homebrew.

'Homebrew' is an idea, a belief, a concept.

Saying 'I'm going to put Homebrew on my Gamecube' is like saying 'I'm going to put food on the table' -as opposed to saying 'I'm going to run Swiss on my Gamecube' or 'I'm going to put pizza on the table'.

When people say Homebrew, what they mean is anything that isn't authentic softwareofficially licensed by Nintendo.

It's stuff like

  • Swiss (Hombrew Launcher) (README) (wiki)
  • CleanRip (GameCube Disc ripper)
  • Datel Action Replay (SD Media Launcher)
  • GCMM (Gamecube Memory Manager, creates hacked game saves) (wiki)
  • Game Boy Interface (runs Game Boy Player)
  • (NES) FCE Ultra GX (NES Emulator) (wiki)
  • SNES9x GX (SNES Emulator) (wiki)
  • Genesis Plus GX (download)

It also includes

  • Playing 'indie' games
    • scogger (mirror)
    • Toy Wars v0.7 (download)
    • FruitRemover Demo (wiki)
    • Sonic RPG Console (lost, if found please contact me)
  • Playing backup discs (such as from Vimm's Lair's GameCube Vualt)
  • Running emulators
  • Goofing off, learning...
    • programming with devkitPro GameCube, for example

The entire list of... pretty muchall Gamecube homebrew appsis only about 25 items long.

The Second Rule of Homebrew

'NGC' means 'Nintendo Gamecube' (duh)

There are some terms that you need to be familiar with.Some of them are obvious. Some of them are subtly different.

There are also some other 3-letter abbreviations you should know:

  • .dol for Dolphin (as Gamecube was 'Project Dolphin'), is essentially 'a game'
  • .gci is the special GCMM backed up / exported save file format
  • .gcm is, literally, a dvd backup renamed from .iso to .gcm
  • .bin is probably just an alias for .dol... not sure

I pick on people saying 'NGC' because... I don't understand why they sometimessay 'GC' and othertimes say 'NGC'. 'NGC' seems overly specific.

It may be that 'GC' is more generic to any 'Dolphin' device, emulator, or virtual console,whereas 'NGC' may refer specifically to the DOL-001 and DOL-101 (original Gamecube hardware),as opposed to the Panasonic Qor the 'GCNext' (a.k.a. 'Revolution'),which was also a 'Dolphin' platform, and also embedded Gamecube hardware.

I'm not sure.

When you don't have a disc in your Gamecube it launches the authentic BIOS,which has the date and time, a memory card manager, and can launch games.

The homebrew launchers are in the category of 'BIOS-like thing'.

There are really only three important launchers:

  • Swiss (Hombrew Launcher)
  • Datel Action Replay (SD Media Launcher)
    • Note: the manual is worth reading
  • GCMM (Gamecube Memory Manager, creates hacked game saves)

I'll go into each in detail, but I also want to mention the irrelevant ones that you shouldn't waste your time on:

  • SDLoad (A more complicated SD Media Launcher)
  • GcoS (predates Swiss)
  • Qoob Pro/Lite/Chip (hardware bios)
  • Viper GC (hardware bios)

If you had been modding your GC for a long time and doing all the early hackery,then those things may have been relevant for you back in the day. They're not relevant now.

The only way to boot homebrew software... is to already have a way to boot homebrew software.

I literally spent hours in this very confusing circular loop of questioning:

Wii
  • Q: 'How can I play the Game Boy Player without the disc?'
    • A: 'With homebrew, the Game Boy Interface'
  • Q: 'How do I load Game Boy Interface?'
    • A: 'With homebrew, such as Swiss'
  • Q: 'How do I load Swiss?'
    • A: 'With homebrew, such as the Wind Waker Hack or HomeBros Exploit'
  • Q: 'How do use the Wind Waker Hack?'
    • A: 'With homebrew, such as GCMM to save a homebrew launcher to a Memory Card'
  • Q: 'How do I load Gamecube Memory Manager (GCMM)?'
    • Q: 'With homebrew, such as Swiss'

It is literally not possible to load homebrew software without homebrew software.

But don't despair yet...

Unfortunately, you can't download it. You have to buy some stuff.

Well, in theory, you can use any of these methods:

  • Burn a very special disc...
    • (but only Datel knows how to do this)
  • Dig out your old copy of Phantasy Star Online and your trusty Broadband Adapter...
    • (except that you don't have that)
  • Load Super Mario Sunshine and then hot swap your burned disc... despite the laser not working with burned discs
    • (probably a hoax, no one else has ever reproduced it)
Emulator

But, in reality, you're going to at least one of:

  • Option A) The CodeJunkies (Datel) Action Replay SD Media Launcher disc
    • $31.50 on CodeJunkies.com (SD Medial Launcher)
    • $20.00 on Amazon (Action Replay Cheat Code Launcher)... but not worth it, get it from CodeJunkies
  • Option B) Gamecube Memory Card pre-loaded with Swiss
    • $34.00 on ebay (Wind Waker Hack)
    • $34.00 on ebay (Smash Bros Melee Hack)
  • Option C) XenoGC (Hardware mod)
    • $5.00 on Amazon
    • $2.50 - $7.50 on ebay$0.00 from a friend who already has either A or B

No matter which you purchase above,you're going to want to end up with all of these as well:

  • Extra Gamecube Memory Card (preferably two or three, 251 blocks or greater)
    • $3.50 on ebay
    • $7.50 on Amazon
    • $13.50 Official Nintendo
  • SD Gecko (SD Card Adapter)
    • $2.50 on ebay
    • $7.50 on Amazon
  • SD Card (<= 2GB slow-speed REQUIRED for Datel SD Launcher NOT SDHC/SDXC)
    • $3.61 on ebay
    • $8.15 on Amazon
  • Wind Waker and/or Smash Bros Melee (REQUIRED for Hacked Memory Card Launcher)
    • (or one of the other exploitable games)
    • $0.00 because you're a Nintendo fan and already have one of these... right?

Important: Everybody lies, so choose Memory Cards wisely. You need a 251-Block card,which would be 2MB, HOWEVER, they're actually sold as 16Mb (2 megabytes 16 megabits),and they're almost always MISLABLED as 16MB. So... look at the block size, not the bit/byte size.

The SD Launcher is older software and can't work with cards that are >= 4GB.

Note: I have been able to use an 8Mb (1 Megabyte, 123-block) card with newer versions of Swiss that compress the boot.gci.

I've got a fever that can only be cured with more homebrew!

No matter which launcher you choose above,the first thing you're going to want to do is still going to beto create a Hacked Swiss Memory Card.

What you'll need for this:

  • Swiss on Github
    • swiss_r927.7z
      • convert from 7z to zip: https://extract.me/
  • GCMM on Github
    • For partial SD2SP2 support (no exFAT), try gcmm_1.4gbeta2.zip as per issue #36
  • One of the memory card exploits, preferrably the Wind Waker Hack
  • FAT-16 (MS-DOS) Formatted <= 2GB SD Card

The steps are relatively simple:

  1. First, format the card as FAT-16. Yes format it. You want all new files to be contiguous.

  2. Copy swiss_xxx.dol to the root of the SD card as autoexec.dol

  3. Copy GCMM to the root of the SD card, left as gcmm_14f.dol, as-is

  4. Make a directory MCBACKUP, which is where game saves and game save hacks will go

  5. Copy the game save hack .gci file to MCBACKUP, for example gzle.gci

    • Note: game save exploits are region specific and should be copied to a card that doesn't have actual saves for the game being exploited (it will have the same game id printed on the disc)
  6. Copy the Swiss .gci file to MCBACKUP as boot.gci

  7. Optionall copy other .dol, .iso, and .gcm files for software you want to use, such as Game Boy Interface or Mario Kart Double Dash, etcIn bash that should look something like this:

  8. Put the memory card in Slot A and the SD adapter in Slot B

  9. Put the launcher disc (Action Replay, Wind Waker, Smash Bros, whatever) in

  10. Either Swiss will load automatically, or you'll have choose to load the (hacked) save file from the in-game load menu

Note: Loading may take a solid 60+ seconds. If it seems like things just froze and aren't loading, don't give up hope until you hit the 2 minute mark. This is true for many homebrew operations.

Congrats! You're now running home brew. The world is your oyster!

Also, at this point you're ready to create your backup homebrew card (and play games)

HomebrewHomebrew gamecube emulator for wii
  1. Open GCMM from the file load menu
  2. Swap the memory card in Slot A for the blank memory card
  3. Select Slot B as SD
  4. Select Restore, and choose the exploit game save file
  5. Select Restore again, and choose the boot launcher file(ex: boot.gci or swiss.gci, or gbi.gci)

Congrats! You've now created your very own hacked boot-to-homebrew memory card.

If you're lucky you can exit back to the boot launcher. If it seems to be frozen,you can either wait up to a solid 2 minutes to see if it loads, just just go aheadand restart right away.

The next time around you'll select your game or software instead of GCMM.

If you consider yourself a technotard and you're more handy with a screw driverthan a command prompt (and you're not afraid of the physical world),you may very find that it's way easier and far less complicatedto just open up the darn thing to get the job done.

Four things to consider:

  • The official 'NickDisk' will work without laser tuning in most systems
    • $10.00 on eBay.com (Swiss Boot Disc only)
    • $18.00 on eBay.com (Swiss Boot Disc + SD2SP2 SD Adapter)
  • Dark-Dye Mini DVD-R (expensive, not generally very useful)
  • Laser tuning (tedious, but easy, just takes a $5 multimeter and $2 precision flat-head screwdriver)
  • Mod chipping (again, easy, just removing some screws and a quick tap with some solder)

The Best DVD-Rs

The best DVD-Rs are hard to identity because DVD-R brand names sometimes obscure themanufacturer, and the models change all the time.What you're looking for is something with the really dark dye (dark dark purple).

In the past, Verbatim and Ritek (especially G04 and G05) were the most reliable brandsfor the best dvd backup burning.

However, these days they're expensive, you may not use them for much else,and you won't even know if the ones you buy work until you've already bought them.

Laser Tuning

If you 'pot tweak' (adjust) your laser's trimpot (hand-adjustable potentiometer),you can cheap-o read burned discs,but you may also shorten the life of your laser.

However, if you just used a burned disc to boot Swiss, and have theSwiss setting for turning the disc back off on boot savedto any SD cards you use, and just run all your games fromthe backups on SD, you'll definetly increase the life of your laser.

You'll want to read through this:

The highlights are:

  • Burned discs will 'click' a lot and not read when not tuned
  • Different default factory settings for different models of GameCube
    • 450-600 Ohms for DOL-001
    • 150-250 Ohms for DOL-101
    • Varies wildly
  • Pot adjusts not the laser power, but signal sensitivity
    • (which may in turn cause laser intensity adjustments)
  • Turn very, very slightly to the left
    • Try to turn down by about 10 to 20 ohms at a time
    • Can be very tedius to find the right value

I'd recommend watching a video on how to do this. It's easy to do,but difficult to explain, and definitely needs pictures.

XenoGC Mod Chip

Taking out screws is dead easy.

Soldering isn't hard, but it's good to learn from an expert,which most of the early-20s YouTubers showing hard mods are not.

You can totally fumble around and get the job done, but watch somevideos byLouis Rossmann (be warned: he has a super foul NYC mouth),EEVBlog (David L Jones), GreatScott!, and Ben 'Heck' (element14),specifically on 'surface mount' soldering, and you'll level up real fast.

(I'll also recommend one of my own: SolderJS #131 - SMD success with THE WORST soldering iron)

Some pro tips:

  • Temperature
    • Use an iron with temperature control, if you can
    • go below 300ºC (~575ºF) and you'll have a hard time
    • 300ºC (~575ºF) is a good, low temperature for direct soldering
    • 350ºC (~650ºF) is a great for smaller tips
    • 400ºC (~750ºF) is maybe too hot for large tips, but required for tiny tips (and magnet wire)
  • Tips
    • Use the largest tip that you have
    • Stay away from conical (round) tips
    • Use a 'screwdriver' or bevel tip
  • Flux
    • Always use flux, in addition to rosin core solder
    • Use too much flux
    • Use cheap flux (the expensive stuff is for machines and has to be heated evenly, much longer)
  • Solder
    • Use fresh, shiny, 60/40 solder
    • DO NOT use dull (oxidized) solder that's been in your garage for years
    • Use too much solder, it's easy to remove
  • Wick
    • Use cheap-o 'goot wick' to remove excess solder
    • Put flux on solder wick, otherwise it won't work
  • FYI
    • Distilled water doesn't conduct electricity
    • Distilled water will remove oxidization/rust, not cause it
    • Isopropal alcohol is 'dry', it will soak up water, and evaporate it
    • Glycerin (pharmacy, skin care isle) a type of alcohol, but won't catch fire and can work as flux in a pinch

And here's my Soldering & Electronics shopping list:

It's worth noting that your laser has a limited lifeand by playing backups of your games rather than the originals you actually extend it.

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Homebrew Channel

Type Downloadable (third party)
Developer(s)Team Twiizers
Platform(s)Wii Channels
Release date(s) April 2, 2008
Genre(s)Utility
Input methodsWii Remote, Wii Remote + Nunchuk, Classic Controller, GameCube Controller, Guitar Controller
Compatibility5
Perfect
GameIDsHAXXHB, OHBCHB, LULZHB
See also...

Dolphin Forum thread
Open Issues
Search Google
Search Wikipedia

The Homebrew Channel is a freeware homebrew application loader that was developed to provide a way of easily running unofficial software on the Wii console. Once installed, it appears as a standard Wii Channel on the Wii Menu. When launched, it displays a list of applications found on an SD card or USB drive. The user then selects an application to launch by using a Wii Remote or GameCube controller. It also accepts application uploads via a USB Gecko or TCP/IP (over Wi-Fi or Ethernet), which allows for quick application testing during development. When launched from the Wii Menu, the Homebrew Channel will check for updates to itself and automatically download them if the user chooses to do so.

The functionality provided by the Homebrew Channel is provided by Dolphin directly, so the HBC is not needed (except to work around Dolphin's broken Wii homebrew detection in some cases).

  • 1Emulation Information
  • 2Problems

Emulation Information

Pre-1.1.3 Black Screen

The developers of the Homebrew Channel had placed traps into the program to prevent the Homebrew Channel from loading in Dolphin. There are other problems in pre-1.1.3 versions, which won't be documented here. The 1.1.3 release of the Homebrew Channel, which is now open source, has removed the anti-Dolphin code.

Homebrew Gamecube Emulator

Missing SD card adapter support

Dolphin does not emulate the official Nintendo memory card to SD card adapter, used to store applications to launch. See issue 11757. The Homebrew Channel also supports USB and the Wii SD slot, which are properly emulated.

Problems

Networking

Network initialization never completes. Fixed since at least 5.0-10472.

3ds Homebrew Gamecube Emulator

Direct3D

Using Direct3D with XFB enabled will cause the screen go black, but the app stills work normally otherwise. Use OpenGL to solve this. Fixed since at least 5.0-10472.

Configuration

This channel does not need non-default settings to run properly.

Version Compatibility

The graph below charts the compatibility with Homebrew Channel since Dolphin's 2.0 release, listing revisions only where a compatibility change occurred.

5.0-14209(current)
2.0(r5384)
Compatibility can be assumed to align with the indicated revisions. However, compatibility may extend to prior revisions or compatibility gaps may exist within ranges indicated as compatible due to limited testing. Please update as appropriate.

Testing

This channel has been tested on the environments listed below:

Gamecube Emulator For Homebrew 3ds

Test Entries
Revision OS Version CPU GPU Result Tester
r7598Windows 7Intel Quad Core Xeon @ 2.8GHzATI Radeon HD 5770All issues in the Problems section are present.SephirothFanatic
3.0Windows 7Intel Quad Core Xeon @ 2.8GHzATI Radeon HD 5770All issues in the Problems section are present.SephirothFanatic
3.0-376Windows 7Intel Quad Core Xeon @ 2.8GHzATI Radeon HD 5770Starts and runs normally, except when reloading or exiting with the Home button.SephirothFanatic
5.0-1422Linux (Debian sid)Intel Core i5-4210H @ 3.5GHzNVIDIA GeForce GT 940Everything works (including launching homebrew, returning to Wii menu, shutting down) except networking.Léo
5.0-2742Windows 7Intel Celeron G1610 @ 2.6GHzIntel HD GraphicsWith D3D and XFB disabled looks normal but cannot launch homebrew; enabling XFB to real made it look black, but didn't crash. Using OGL and XFB to real seems to work normally, except for network.EblfIYH
5.0-3951Windows 10Intel Celeron G1610 @ 2.6GHzIntel HD GraphicsNow, it crashes with D3D. OpenGL still workEblfIYH
5.0-3965Windows 10Intel Celeron G1610 @ 2.6GHzIntel HD GraphicsD3D works again, with the same problemsEblfIYH
5.0-10472Windows 10Intel Core I5 4670K @ 4.3GHzNVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060D3D issues seems to be fixed, couldn't reproduce it with D3D11/12. Works without any graphical issues. Difference between graphics backends is huge though. D3D12=1000FPS, D3D11=900FPS, OpenGL=600FPS, Vulkan=500FPSMiksel12

Homebrew Gamecube Emulator For Wii

Gameplay Videos

Gamecube Emulator For Homebrew


Homebrew Gamecube Emulator Wii

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