InterviewSolution
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Solve : Super nintendo wont save levels?? |
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Answer» Hi and thanks for taking a look at my thread. Ok, a battery that lasts 35 years wow!!1978? What? You have a Nintendo 64. Those were released ~1996, making the console at most 17 years old. The SNES is around 22 years old, and the NES is around 27 years of age. The only console that is 35 years old is the Atari 2600, which you do not have. (Or maybe you do, but it's certainly not the Nintendo console you are referring to) Quote BC_Programmer, you might be able to tell me then, what is the unit in the front top of the console? It is under a removable panel on the 64 console.It's the Memory. It comes with 4MB of RAMBUS memory. The default has 4MB- it is called the "Jumper pack". It is rather featureless. The memory can be expanded to improve graphics or for some games was needed to work, and expands the console's memory to 8MB. It has a bit of red plastic along the top. There is no reason to remove it unless you are replacing it with another one. Quote Just so I understand correctly then, the game cartridge has the battery in it, not the controller/handpiece or the insertable 256K memory unit? I thought I was rather clear :/ Quote 1. Some N64 games have Battery-backed memory on the cartridge. This includes games such as Super Mario 64. Doom is one of the N64 games that uses the Memory pack.Firstly to BC_Programmer. yes you are right...Not 35 years at all. See what alcohol and late nights do to my mathematics. My kids were all into the games so they would have been about 10 through to 16 or so.. Sorry everyone for that gaff. I would have been about 35 at the time they came out, is where my confusion came from. You also did explain it very well. I was just reiterating my understanding of what you said. BC_Programmer this unit is definitely a Nintendo 64 that my Doom failed to save. I also have several others around ranging from Snes, Playstations and WII. To reddevilggg, great link thanks. I just had a closer look at the cartridge and decided to open an old one first so if I didn't do it correctly it wouldn't really matter. ( I chose Tetrisphere.) My units looks like they have the original expansion packs then, and I recently found a supplier of the memory cards, rather inexpensive, on Ebay. I'd be happy to pickup a couple of them for their price.Just to be clear re: the Expansion PAK, it is only needed for certain games; it plugs into the console. You either have the jumper pack (included, sounds like you do) or you have the Expansion pack (which doubles the memory). I'm confused because you said "expansion packs" plural :/ Which makes me think you might be referring to the Controller Pack (the memory cards that go into the controllers). the Expansion pak is required for a half dozen games (Donkey Kong 64 and Perfect Dark being two specifics I can RECALL). Doom 64 doesn't use the extra memory for anything, just fwiw. This Wikipedia article on N64 accessories might clear it up. For saving games it's either on the game, or uses a Memory Card on the controller. The game in question, Doom, uses the Memory Card. If the games are not saving or being persistent, than it's likely the battery on the memory card is dying. You could of course just get another memory card(s) (make sure it's a Controller pack memory card for an N64 and not the expansion pack, though!), but you can also just replace the battery; it's a standard CR2032. In that regard we can see the link reddevilggg posted; his posting goes under the original notes about the game being an SNES game, as well as using on-cartridge SRAM. I've found that controller packs typically require no extra work; you take it apart and the battery has it's own holder that you can slip a new battery into, and the game should store your saved files again. N64 games (the ones that have battery-backed SRAM on the cartridge, anyway) are often more tricky to deal with because the cartridges are smaller. (Sidebar on the linked topic: The recommendations for replacing a battery I've seen attempt to be more "future-proof" in that they typically recommend replacing that entire portion with a CR2032 battery holder; so the battery can be easily replaced, which seems reasonable). |
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