User:DandelionSprout/Memory Card: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Nintendo GameCube: Compressed this too a bit.)
(→‎Nintendo GameCube: Trying to not make the Megabytes column so wide.)
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Revision as of 21:43, May 9, 2024

Info that has not yet been carried onto console' pages, in the event that Talk:Memory Card ends up deleting the entire page and all its contents before such moves have occured.

✓Nintendo 64
Nintendo GameCube

☐Maybe find some images of its larger memory cards?

Nintendo Wii

☐For WiiWare, I cannot find properly reliable sources for game sizes. Everyone seem to state 83 and 86 blocks respectively due to "I heard it from a friend, who had heard it from a friend."

Nintendo 3DS
☐I need to find a way to consistently make "Block" a unit worth explaining across consoles, even after a page deletion.
Wii U (All but moved previously, but I need to doublecheck Mii Maker and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Nintendo Switch (What would even happen if I took out its SD card?)
☐Massively reduce the contents of "SD card support table".

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A Memory Card is a video game accessory that has been a part of many gaming consoles. Essentially, it is an external memory database where game data is saved, including for games of the Super Mario franchise. From Nintendo GameCube to Nintendo 3DS, a non-standard measurement unit called a block was used for memory card capacity by Nintendo and in the consoles' system settings. On the GameCube, one block was approximately 8 KB. Wii, Nintendo DSi and Nintendo 3DS had one block be 128 KB.

Since the Wii U, industry standard units like gigabytes and megabytes are used within the consoles' settings.

List of Memory cards

Nintendo GameCube

Nintendo GameCube memory card
A Nintendo GameCube memory card

Unlike the Nintendo 64, the Nintendo GameCube is very dependent on the memory card, since save data cannot be written on its discs, and the GameCube lacks any form of internal memory. Games played without a memory card inserted act as if they were being played for the first time, and data cannot be saved. Three types of memory cards were officially released, from lowest to highest storage and sporting color differentiation:

  • Gray - 59 blocks (0.47 MB)
  • Black - 251 blocks (2.0 MB)
  • White - 1,019 blocks (8.1 MB)

One block on the GameCube is 8 KB.

Below is a list of the different Super Mario games and their respective block size, and conversion to kilobytes.

Game list
Game Blocks Kilobytes (KB)
Super Mario Sunshine 7 56
WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Party Game$! 4 32
Mario Party 6 5 40
Mario Kart: Double Dash!! 8 64
Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (each Time Trial ghost) 5 40
Super Mario Strikers 5 40
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door 17 136
Mario Party 7 6 48
Mario Power Tennis 3 24
Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour 13 104
Donkey Konga 3 JP 5 40
Wario World 10 80
Nintendo Puzzle Collection 6 48
Mario Party 4 2 16
Mario Party 5 5 40
Luigi's Mansion 3 24
Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix 2 16
Mario Superstar Baseball 10 80
Donkey Kong Jungle Beat 3 24
SSX on Tour 59[1] 472
NBA Street V3 15 120

SD cards

It has been requested that this section be rewritten and expanded to include more information. Reason: The section contradicts itself on whether pre-Switch consoles could handle more than 32 GB, e.g. 64 GB. (tagged on May 4, 2024)

An icon whose design and intention are to demonstrate an SD card.
Design of an SD card.

SD cards are very common types of storage mediums that Nintendo began using since the Wii era. The Wii, unlike the Nintendo GameCube, has internal memory where players can save their game data, or even on SD cards, especially in cases where the internal memory runs out of storage. SD cards can store the Wii's channel data and some non-save game data, such as snapshots in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, though the game also allows snapshots to be saved on the internal storage. The Wii, Nintendo 3DS, and Wii U all support SD cards up to 32GB in memory, though in the Wii's case, before the System Menu 4.0 update in March 2009, it could support only up to 2GB standard SD cards, not any SDHC cards. Super Smash Bros. Brawl and many other games are incompatible with SDHC cards, especially if they were released before the Wii gained SDHC card support.

The Wii has an SD card button in the lower left corner of the Wii Menu. If the button shows up as blue instead of gray, meaning the Wii acknowledges that an SD card is inserted, clicking on the button will show a special menu with gray boxes on black, showing Virtual Console and WiiWare games that are stored on the SD card, including any of Super Mario franchise.

The Nintendo Switch uses MicroSD cards for internal storage, allowing for up to 2 TB. Two official Nintendo microSD cards designed especially for the Nintendo Switch are Super Mario-themed: the red 128GB microSD card with a Mushroom and the yellow 512GB microSD card with a Super Star symbol.

Game Blocks Kilobytes (KB)
Super Mario Galaxy 1 128
Super Mario Galaxy 2 1 128
New Super Mario Bros. Wii 1 128
Super Paper Mario 1 128
Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition 1 128
Mario Strikers Charged 1 128
Super Mario Sluggers 2 256
Mario Power Tennis 1 128
Mario Party 8 1 128
Mario Party 9 1 128
Super Smash Bros. Brawl (each custom stage or replay) 1 128
Donkey Kong Country Returns 2 256

Channel and WiiWare game sizes

For Wii channels and WiiWare games that can be copied in their entirety normally to an SD card in the Data Management settings.

Game Blocks Megabytes (MB)
Mario Kart Channel 86 11.0
Dr. Mario Online Rx 83 10.6
WarioWare: D.I.Y. Showcase 86 11.0

SD card support table

An icon whose design and intention are to demonstrate an SD card.

Nintendo consoles from Nintendo Wii onwards support SD cards. The Wii could initially only use cards up to 2 GB. The Wii Menu 4.0 update added support for cards up to 32 GB (SDHC), but it did not have retroactive effect for previously released games (e.g. Super Smash Bros. Brawl).

Nintendo DSi, Nintendo 3DS and Wii U have native support for cards up to 32 GB.

An icon whose design and intention are to demonstrate a MicroSD card.

New Nintendo 3DS replaced the standard SD card size with microSD, still with a limit of 32 GB.

Nintendo Switch has a microSD slot with full native support for cards up to 2 TB (SDXC).

References

  1. ^ The PAL and JP releases instead state 7 blocks. The reason for this discrepancy is not yet known.