![]() My Gamecube games are just ISOs in one folder and USBLoader GX or Nintendont (not sure which) doesn't like this folder structure, I've manually created a few games by creating a sub-folder moving in the iso and renaming it to game.iso and that works. Each time I load it up I have to re-point it to my folder and it does the scan all over again? Am I supposed to export this as HTML or something so I can use this as reference in future? It is a graphical user interface based on wit. But I'm not really sure what else it actually does (it says convert - convert to what?). Witgui is a free Wii and GameCube game manager for macOS. I'm on MacOSX so I have limited options to manage my Wii and Gamecube images, however I've come across WitGui that uses wit and wwt? I've pointed it at my collection of wbfs files and it creates a window of games with a boxart and metadata, ok cool. It appears then, that none, but he who is Whether necessaritrue God, could possibly be surety but the quely the son stion is. Now close the preferences window, click the button WBFS partition from Witgui, select the key or disk you formatted in WBFS and you should be able to access to. Nintendont for GC games only supports FAT32 so might as well use the format that it best supported. It will automatically split any Wii game over 4GB for you and will load with USB Loader GX. Best to format your drive as MBR FAT32 and use Wii Backup Manager. With Witgui you can manage your game collection with just a few clicks. I'm using Wii with USBLoader GX on Homebrew and my collection is working fine so far. WBFS Manager and the WBFS HDD format are outdated and not recommended. Witgui is a graphical user interface for wit available for Mac OS X. Hi all - please bare with me I'm a newbie
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