Nintendo Wii is one of the most popular gaming systems. However, disks on it are quite expensive. It is much cheaper to write the downloaded image of the game to your media, for this it is enough to use several programs to work with the.wii image format.
Necessary
- - an image with a game;
- - DVD disc;
- - unscrambler.exe;
- - Nero or UltraISO
Instructions
Step 1
Download the image with the desired game, which will have the extension.wii. You also need to take the image using a rawdump program called unscrambler.exe. Note that the WII disc image is larger than DVD5, so it cannot be burned directly, and the output.iso will be about the same size.
Step 2
Install the NERO program, preferably version 6, since NERO7 may experience errors when recording images with more than 2000 files. Although, there is a chance that later versions have solved this problem.
Step 3
Unzip the.wii image using unscrabler (just select the appropriate option) into one folder. For example, in the C: / Wii directory.
Step 4
Go to the Start menu and launch the command line ("Start" - "Run" - type "cmd"). A DOS window will open, through which you need to go to the directory where the unpacked files are, using the "cd" command (for example, "cd C: Wii").
Step 5
Then in the input line write "unscrambler.exe image.wii image.iso" and press Enter. "Image.wii" is the name of the file in the directory, and "image.iso" is the name of the target file. Wait 10-15 minutes.
Step 6
Further, the.iso file can be written to the disc itself. Insert the disc into the drive, open Nero. Go to the item "Recorder" - "Burn image". After finishing the burning, the disc can be used successfully.
Step 7
Recently, many programs have appeared that allow you to burn an image without using the command line. However, at their core, they have the same unscrambler. For example, the WiiUI application, which, in addition to the usual conversion, can create images both for using them in the console and for emulators. It is able to change the region of the disc (PAL or NTSC) and independently burn the image to a disc.