The WBFS Archive: A Complete Guide to Managing Wii Game Backups
This format "scrubs" the unnecessary padding. For example, New Super Mario Bros. Wii is only about 350 MB in WBFS format, compared to the 4.37 GB ISO. Benefits of a WBFS Archive: Wbfs Archive
That said, here are for WBFS-related tools/archives, in case one fits your need: The WBFS Archive: A Complete Guide to Managing
Why an Archive Matters
However, the existence of the WBFS archive is inextricably linked to the ethical gray area of piracy. Nintendo, historically protective of its intellectual property, viewed the ability to rip games to a USB drive not as preservation, but as an existential threat. The tools required to create WBFS files—specifically homebrew channels and USB loaders—were the same tools used to play illegally downloaded games. The WBFS archive became a double-edged sword. For the enthusiast with a shelf full of legitimately purchased games, it offered a salvation—a way to back up Super Mario Galaxy or The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess to ensure they would survive the decay of the physical disc. Yet, for the casual user, it offered an all-you-can-eat buffet of free software. The "archive" became a euphemism in the piracy scene, a collection of terabytes readily available on torrent sites, stripping the financial value from the console’s library. Benefits of a WBFS Archive: That said, here
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