Friday, 28 February 2014

Wii Fix Guide Best Option For Repairing Wii.

By James Pierce




Nintendo Wii competes with other newer generation gaming consoles such as the Sonly PlayStation 4 and Xbox 360. It is a very social style entertainment system that brings friends and family alike together for hours at a time, unlike other gaming consoles it promotes interaction with other around you vs. individual play or online games.

Although I enjoy its mind relaxing ability, it was disappointing when I first installed my update only to realize that the only space that was remaining was roughly 3GB of the entire internal memory of 8GB. After this had happened the subsequent problems followed. The operating system of the Wii system became very sluggish. I noticed this when I tried to open its setting and it was quite taking long time to open the settings. This kept on disturbing as to why it should take up so much of the disk hard drive space and still require lengthy loading times only to open images, text and other few sound effects.

As these problems started to pop up I decided to consider an addition of the thumb drive. I felt that this was going to solve my problems and it appeared to speed up my system for a short period of time but then new complications started to pop up. To top things off my USB port had become very outdated. As a result the amount of data transmission got very slow and the amount of power allowed through each port was limited to 500mA. It was at this time I decided I had to repair my Wii. I had to research all of the ways I could do Wii repair.

I originally thought that sending my Wii out for repair was the answer but soon realized that I was not comfortable with that and decided I need to do the repairs myself. I proceeded to get the Wii Fix Guide and was back up and running in no time. The only problem I had was a little question about a procedure. One email to the free support was worth more than anything else as I got a quick and correct answer and was up and running again!

As always everyone points out that the real option is to send your Wii out for upgrades or repair. Then you read about the real nightmare stories of the long wait times and the Wii coming back in worse condition or not coming back at all. I knew this was not the route I wanted to take. There had to be another option. Then I came across reviews of a Wii Fix Guide website. Most of the reviews were really good and talking about great step by step plans with images and to top it off live email support. I had to go this route. After a short time of doing my Wii repair and upgrades I had my Wii up and running again.






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