Changes

m
ce and stuff
Line 2: Line 2:  
[[File:WiiFunCenterGUI.jpg|thumb|The Wii Fun Center GUI.]]
 
[[File:WiiFunCenterGUI.jpg|thumb|The Wii Fun Center GUI.]]
   −
The Fun Center is a contraption made by Starlight Children's Foundation and Nintendo to bring their consoles to hospitals. It consists of a console, TV, and DVD player that can be transported easily around the hospital grounds. SNES, Nintendo 64, GameCube, Wii and Wii U versions have been made.
+
The Fun Center was a contraption made by the Starlight Children's Foundation and Nintendo to bring their consoles to hospitals. It consists of a console, TV, and DVD player that can be transported easily through the hospital grounds. SNES, Nintendo 64, GameCube, Wii and Wii U versions have been made.
   −
Perhaps the most interesting Fun Center is the Wii version. It actually runs on development Wii hardware. You load games onto it and they are displayed in a GUI, which can be considered watered down compared to USB Loaders, especially WiiFlow. In order to get games loaded on it, you had to call Nintendo's Fun Center hotline and use a Windows download manager to download them.
+
Perhaps the most interesting Fun Center is the Nintendo Wii version. It actually runs on development Wii hardware. You load games onto it and they are displayed in a GUI, which can be considered watered down compared to USB Loaders, especially WiiFlow. In order to get games loaded on it, you had to call Nintendo's Fun Center hotline and use a Windows download manager to download them.
   −
Of course, we don't have the firmware or much internal info on how the Wii Fun Center worked. It's one of our [[Holy Grails]].
+
Of course, we don't have the firmware or much internal info on how the Wii Fun Center worked. Because of that, it's one of our [[Holy Grails]].
    
The Wii U version seemed to have the games pre-installed on the system without any different GUI, and the other versions probably worked like a real system would, where you have to use cartridges or discs.
 
The Wii U version seemed to have the games pre-installed on the system without any different GUI, and the other versions probably worked like a real system would, where you have to use cartridges or discs.
    
An interesting note about the Wii Fun Center is that a possible system error message was "Please insert disk", and if this message occurred the owner was instructed to return the system. This is an [[NDEV Menu]] error message displayed when there is no inserted disk (real or emulated).
 
An interesting note about the Wii Fun Center is that a possible system error message was "Please insert disk", and if this message occurred the owner was instructed to return the system. This is an [[NDEV Menu]] error message displayed when there is no inserted disk (real or emulated).