
Take that number and add one (0x107BCFFFF + 1 = 0x107BD0000). This is where you'll need that large number. Open your modified image in a the hex editor and tell it to resize the file. Find a hex editor that has a 'file resize' tool (most do).Ĩ.

Write down the ending 'address' of the data, this is the end of the disc. Close and reload the image file and look at the last data section. You will need to resize the file manually.Ħ. Your image will still be 8.3GB even though it only consists of 4.3GB of data. WiiScrubber does not resize the image file to reflect the new data size. Shuffle Partitions, to 'defragment' the partitions to one spot. Use WiiScrubber to replace partition 2 with your new partition. Use Partition Builder to create a partition using your newly-changed data folder. (Unless you don't care about the opening movie.ģ. Use a batch script to replace all videos with '2006_Wii.thp', except for OPMovie.thp. Extract all files from partition 2 into a folder.Ģ. Of course, my actual programming ability is limited at best so I can hardly claim to be an expert, but based on everything I've read on the issue, this seems to be the most plausible situation.ġ.

That would probably require a good amount of knowledge of the contents of those files in general it would be no small task to say the least. If you knew that, you could change the appropriate values on the subspace versions of stages and would hypothetically be able to access it on versus. If you're wanting to use the subspace levels in versus mode, I would guess that the first step would be figuring out what's different between the stage files for subspace areas and normal stages. You can tell something is up when you notice how much worse many of the characters are at basic jumping around (look at Sonic's up special, and it's really obvious), and you also notice that there is no random tripping in subspace (really!). Subspace in general is a fundamentally really different mode from versus I think everything is just formatted differently in it.

I remember reading about people moving the files to the other side (by just re-arranging files), and it didn't make a difference. I don't think the real issue ever was that the subspace stuff is on a different layer of the disc (though it is true that it is).
