![]() I looked around several sites and reviews of the GW3DS and saw pics of the PCB from the blue cart.Īfter reading through the review and inspecting the GW3DS firmware folder I understood that the cart is a R4i clone, so I got my first clue to look for further information about the cart, since I knew that the GW3DS Team wasn't building those carts themselfs. On my journey to figure out the whole NDS scene, I first tried to understand what I actually got with my Gateway 3DS. Which is fine actually, but also wrong, in case you ever decide to check whats going on and find yourself in the same situation as me and realise pretty quick that there is way to much information to keep track of everything.īut lets get to the goal of this thread, I just wanted to share my point on things first and show that it isn't easy for someone whos is completly new to the whole thing, but I think I got my around all that stuff pretty well. I'm that kind of person who wants to know everything about each of my devices, to see whats possible and what is not.īut I also know that there are peeps out there who just want to play their games and don't give a damn about how the stuff works, as long as it works, tell them what to do and of they go. Now the thing is, everytime I buy a new console which has a huge community behind it and an ongoing hacking scene which I never cared about, I find myself lost in all of the information which is available for the specific device, I'm pretty sure we've all been there once.įor the 3DS part of the Gateway 3DS it's a piece of cake, since this thing is "brand new" and the news and information about it can be overwatched.īut a few days ago the DS part of the Gateway 3DS (the blue cart) got some of my attention, so I set out to check whats the deal with DS flashcarts and found myself in a chaos of information.įrom Wood Firmware, to 2000 R4 clones, over words like DLDI, Bootstrap, Kernel and whatnot my brain began to crack my skull in order to break out because it didn't fit anymore. I knew such things existed because a lot of my buddies got Nintendo DS' with flashcarts, but I never realy bothered about the Nintendo world that much, since I'm more into the PlayStation scene.īut every now and then I buy a new console just for fun and so I got myself a 3DS XL together with the Gateway 3DS flashcart. I'm pretty new to this whole DS flashcart thing. ![]() My goal might not be clear at first, but the text is about getting to know what the blue cart bundled with the Gateway 3DS actually is and if there might be way to update it, to support later 3DS firmwares, since I read that the bootstap can't be updated, yet I found "proof" that it might work. There was so much I wanted to say that I completely lost track and messed up the structure pretty good. shutterbug2000: For the muted sound/touchscreen fix for nds-bootstrap.WARNING: This thread got pretty long while I was writing it.me: For implementing the auto-reset power button function used in NTR-mode, and LED functions, to nds-bootstrap.Apache Thunder: DS menu top screen image.\compile_docker.ps1 clean to clean the artifacts before attempting to build with Docker. Note that Docker compilation is not compatible with native Windows compilation. The script accepts make arguments as well, for example. Then run compile_docker.ps1 in a PowerShell window. First, install docker at, and configured Shared Drives for the drive where DSiMenu is cloned. You can compile DSiMenu with Docker using the provided PowerShell (. Building with DockerĭSiMenu comes included with a Docker image for easy building without having to manually set up the required version of devkitARM and Easy GL2D. Make sure that grit and mmutil are installed. Also, download this file, and place it at devkitPro/libnds/lib, overwriting the existing one. Merge the contents LibGL2D_DS.zip:/distributable/libnds/* (lib and include) at devkitPro/libnds/. ![]() Buildingīuilding this app by yourself require DEVKITARM with DEVKITPRO. DSiMenu is an open-source DSi Menu upgrade/replacement, and frontend for nds-bootstrap for DSi, and flashcards.
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