Extract the contents to the root of your micro SD card. It already comes updated for system menu 1. At this point, regardless of which cartridge you picked, you're now ready to play NDS backups. The problem is we don't have any backups yet, so we need to grab some of our game cartridges and create some. Before we can start backing up our games, however, we need to do a quick setup. From this point forward the guide is flash cart agnostic.
Unless explicitly noted all instructions apply to any flash cart. At this point you'll need your Nintendo DS or DS Lite, your wireless router, the game cartridges you want to back up, and a computer to back them up to. We'll be using a Windows 7 PC. First, configure your router. Unfortunately Nintendo never really got on the secure-wireless bandwagon when it came to the Nintendo DS line. If you're running your wireless access point wide open, you're all set. If you're using encryption stronger than WEP you'll have to temporarily crank it down to old-school—and insecure—WEP security.
You can change it back as soon as you're done backing up your games. Second, make sure your NDS can connect to the wireless router. If you have a Wi-Fi-enabled game start the game and use it to configure your wireless settings—the NDS and NDS Lite lack a system-menu option for configuring it without a game. If you don't have a game with Wi-Fi play that would allow you to configure things, that's okay.
You have a flash cart now that we can run some homebrew software on. Load up your flash cart and browse to the DSOrganize folder.
Launch the DSOrganize. Once loaded, go to Configuration, then click the start button to navigate across the tabs until you reach the last tab with the Wi-Fi symbol on it. Use one of the three available slots to set up your Wi-Fi information and save it. Finally it's time to download and configure the backup tool. Download a copy of Backup Tool 0. BT comes with a copy of smallFTP, which is perfect for the task ahead. Copy the NDS folder contents—but not the folder itself—over to the root directory of your micro SD card; extract the smallFTP folder over to your computer.
You'll need to do some very brief configuration before we jump back to your DS. Replace the server IP with the local address of your computer on the Wi-Fi network. You can check this by typing ipconfig at the Windows command prompt or by browsing to your router's administration page and checking there.
The rest of the settings can stay the same, as they are pre-configured to work with the copy of smallFTP included with BT—change them if you had to set up your own server with different settings. The default dump directory for smallFTP is c:temp. If you would like it to dump somewhere else, open up ftpd. Make sure the directory exists, otherwise the backup tool will error out.
Plug your micro SD card and flash cart into your DS and boot it up. NDS file you find inside. You should see a blue and white screen that prompts you to remove the current flash cart and put in the game you want to back up. Do so and press A to initialize. You should see a screen like the one below. This screen is for backing up your saved games. Nearly every flash cart will manage your saved games for you as long as the.
SAV file is the same as the. NDS file. Now is a great time to copy the. SAV file over. When the transfer is done press the Right paddle button to navigate to the Save Restore menu. Press it again to switch to the ROM Backup menu. You'll see the screen below with the ROM information changed to reflect whatever game you've inserted. Press B to get started. Depending on the game you're transferring, you'll need to be patient. Now is a good time to double check the smallFTP window on your computer—or whatever FTP server you've set up—to make sure the file transfer looks good on both ends.
Transfer over the WiFi network takes approximately one minute per 0. Play it safe and just round up to 1 minute per MB. This particular ROM was 64MB, and when we checked back in an hour later it had just finished a few minutes prior. You've copied your game and can now copy that. Let's do that now. For those of you who aren't satisfied until the fat lady sings—or in this case the Curious Professor travels—here's a screenshot of the game loaded. Start to finish, that's how you back up your Nintendo DS cartridges to protect against loss, damage, and theft.
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