User talk:Wario W. 97

Personal Image
I just tagged your image as. It had a broken. Just keep in mind the rules about personal images. Also you aren't using the image, which will show up in Special:UnusedFiles and may end up being tagged with or have  switched to, which will show up in Category:To be deleted. To use it, just insert it somehow into your userpage with at the very least. If I am wrong about this, feel free to change the description of the image. -- 15:33, 23 June 2016 (EDT)

Reminder
File:Red-plumber-ssg3.png and File:Green-plumber-ssg3.png -- 20:08, 17 July 2016 (EDT)

Image Category Reminder
This is a unique circumstance but the images you uploaded for Picross NP (new article) were missing Category:Picross NP Images and Category:Title Screen Images for the title screens. I just created the one category. Please use it for future Picross NP images. -- 15:14, 14 October 2016 (EDT)

I told you once before about this. Also one edit, you removed without specifying the category it belongs to! I had to fix that by inserting Category:Picross NP Images. Please do this next time. -- 15:46, 4 January 2017 (EST)

How To Get Better Quality Images
I saw that you uploaded a few images for Picross NP. Did you get those from YouTube (or a similar source)? If so, YouTube isn't the best source to get screenshots because video compression artifacts and improper sizes are extremely common. You end up grabbing more pixels than necessary and it might have motion blur attached to them. File sizes end up being ridiculous because of it. I was able to replace each and every one of them with an emulator. Here's how and that is this screenshot guide. -- 16:45, 14 October 2016 (EDT)
 * You might want to rethink using Snes9x compared to ZSNES because ZSNES has several problems compared to Snes9x. Accuracy issues, artifacts on rendered frames, and even a vulnerability that can penetrate the Windows layer if a properly formatted ROM file is loaded (doesn't work in other emulators). Granted, there are better emulators than Snes9x, but you will still be OK with it. Also, to save on file size and make things more reasonably sized, change the windowed resolution to 256x224 (1x), which is how most SNES games display before being rendered to the TV screen. -- 14:43, 18 October 2016 (EDT)

Image Sources?
Your uploads concern me where you are getting them from. They don't look like emulator screenshots or anything that by guide showcases. They look like they are coming from YouTube videos. Am I right? -- 18:09, 16 March 2017 (EDT)
 * Dolphin has issues getting native non-blurry screenshots on default settings. I don't know what TCRF members do alternatively because their guide might be a bit outdated compared to my experimentations, especially since they are recommending Dolphin 4.0 as the earliest version to use (latest stable is 5.0 and the developer builds get even more accurate than that, making the stable dated). What Dolphin does when using  is force all games into 640x480 (640x360 if in Widescreen mode). This is wrong on so many levels, it's embarrassing. The devs have addressed this issue somewhat, starting with 5.0-1374, but it still isn't correct. Dolphin thinks the 1x internal resolution is always 640x528. It varies from game to game, from my tests. So if you use TRCF's recommendations, it's no wonder screenshots come out blurry no matter what. If you want the best chances of getting a sharp, minimal, and accurate screenshot from Dolphin, use savestates and the software renderer, as I linked you to. Heed my advice I give there. If you use the more general method I suggest, 3D models come out sharp, but sprites on HUD or anywhere else get blurry. -- 15:15, 30 March 2017 (EDT)
 * I suggest trying my method rather than TCRF's method. I really don't like their guide because of how poorly Dolphin handles native resolution screenshots. I hope the developers redo their native resolution code. Who knows? It might fix a lot of long standing issues that the emulator had. -- 15:18, 31 March 2017 (EDT)
 * From the looks of the screenshot, widescreen doesn't look all that necessary, so changing the Wii settings to 4:3 (640x480) from 16:9 (854x480) would be a recommended first step. I would savestate (Shift+F1, Shift+F2, etc.) at that screen, stop emulation, switch graphics backend to software renderer, load the game back up, and then load the savestate (F1, F2, etc.). -- 18:03, 31 March 2017 (EDT)