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Wii Fix Guide Best Option For Repairing Wii.

Written By Unknown on Saturday, March 1, 2014 | Saturday, March 01, 2014

By James Pierce




As a seventh generation console, Wii competes with other generation console such as the Microsoft's Box 360 and Sony's play station. It is a social and active entertainment service that brings the whole family together. Unlike other generation console, it is a fun and intuitive game that is enhanced by our body motions.

As much as I enjoy playing my Wii and it does bring about relaxation and unwinding from a long day at work, it was very disappointing and not to mention stressful when I first put in my updated and came to realize that the only space that I had left was around 3gigbytes of internal memory. This was out of the overall 8 GB. It was not too long after that my problems began to occur. The OS was very sluggish and I noticed this as I tried to open settings and it was taking a considerable amount more time than before. This was irritating me as to why it should take up so much HD space and still take a long time to open small things such as images, text or sound effects.


As a result of all these problems I decide to consider the addition of a thumb drive. This worked very well at the beginning but after some time small complications began to emerge. The USB port 2.0 became very outdated and as a result data transmission became very slower and the USB port could only allow the device to draw a maximum of 500mA of current power per port. It was then that I decided I had to do something such as find a way to repair my Wii.

I was against the fence on this and was leaning toward sending my Wii out for repair but soon decided I needed to live a little and take the plunge into repairing my own Wii. Soon after I was mid deep into repairing my own Nintendo Wii. I did come across a question but soon had an answer after placing an email to the free support that was provided. I am now up and running again.

One of the options that popped up first was sending my Nintendo Wii for Wii repair to a Wii repair house. From what I gathered there were a lot of mixed experiences on the internet and word is a lot of the repair houses are not reliable. To top it off they can get expensive and the hassle of shipping these can be a bit stressful. Then I came up with some reviews on a Wii Fix Guide. There were plenty of good reviews and to top it off there was free email support. I knew that this was the right way to go. I am not a very technical person but I am good with my hands and do well with good directions. I enjoy doing things like this and saving money. My family was totally astonished when I turned my Wii back on and we were up and playing again after I made the repairs and upgrades.






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