NintendoAge http://nintendoage.com/forum/ -Sqooner Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-26T22:59:50 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-26T18:41:45 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-26T12:36:45 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 ]]> Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-25T21:37:30 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-25T21:33:14 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11
Step by step:
1) Download ROM(s)
2) Start up EZ4 Client v1.03
3) Click game from Windows like 'Open' menu
4) If you wish to patch it click the patch check box button on the left side of the box
5) Click send to have to go into your Micro SD card

That's it. Just then slip the micro card into the mini sd adapter and slide it into the EZFlash 4 GBA cart and put it in your system and start it up. You'll get a menu and from there just d-pad over to it, hit the button and the game plays.

The only thing easier you can't buy anymore which were flash carts from the earlier/mid 2000s which had a USB cable in top, or was a usb cable into a dock which you'd place the flashcart and still transfer the games the same way except with a hell of a lot less space since they didn't have sd cards but chips you flash the game to. ]]>
Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-25T20:47:03 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-17T18:52:56 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11
standigz what problem did you have with your mini to micro sd convertor as I've never had an issue. ]]>
Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-17T16:23:07 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11 Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-17T01:28:46 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11
I have a USB Smart Card for GB and GBC games but I don't think I've actually tested it on the GC player. ]]>
Gamecube Game Boy Player and EZ Flash IV? http://nintendoage.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=31&threadid=84446 2012-09-16T21:12:15 -05.00 wadeboggsmustache 11
As far as loading it up, yes you can but there are limits.

Basically how it works is that if you want to do GB and GBC stuff, you need to use GOOMBA and GOOMBA COLOR respectively. That said, you can not just load a crap ton of games and expect it to work. I can't remember exactly the threshhold on it as far as a maximum goes but somewhere in the neighborhood I think of 16MB or so will work. At some point the ROM gets too big and it will fail to load at all in flash card via the menu, or the rom will be corrupt and only read only so far into it so some games won't work.

What I did for myself after learning that was to create a Goomba.gb with just b&w stuff, then I did a goombaGBC1 and 2 file which I split my GBC games up evenly. So once you use the goomba builder that makes these, you can just use the software that comes with the card to load them onto the SD card, but you have to use their app or it can and usually will mess things up. Once there, just boot the GBA up, click the game in the shell menu the flash card has and the emulator file with the roms in it will fire up in a moment.

I've looked and it's the only good one left made that has the highest of compatibility. There are a few others but they're picky and smaller, and then you have the old products from years ago and good luck finding any of that, plus they're limited down to like 32MB or 64MB of files at most max while the ezflash can handle a couple of GB of files. ]]>