The collaboration between hardware explorers like Nandbin and emulation projects like melonDS points to an exciting future.
For power users, a new "Debug Console" displays ARM opcodes and VRAM contents – useful for homebrew developers testing their own DS games.
If you do not want to use your physical NAND dump (or want a clean slate), modern versions of melonDS and external tools can technically generate a "virtual" NAND structure. However, the most stable method is still using a hardware dump.
The collaboration between hardware explorers like Nandbin and emulation projects like melonDS points to an exciting future.
For power users, a new "Debug Console" displays ARM opcodes and VRAM contents – useful for homebrew developers testing their own DS games. nandbin melonds new
If you do not want to use your physical NAND dump (or want a clean slate), modern versions of melonDS and external tools can technically generate a "virtual" NAND structure. However, the most stable method is still using a hardware dump. nandbin melonds new