It is a proprietary file system developed by Waninkoko to allow the Wii to read external USB drives, which are not natively supported by the console's operating system.
Two methods:
Modern WBFS files can reside on standard FAT32 or NTFS formatted drives.
A WBFS file is useless without a USB loader—the homebrew application that reads it from your drive and launches the game. Here are the key players:
(Wii Backup File System) is a proprietary file system developed by the Wii homebrew community. A .wbfs file contains a dumped copy of a Wii game disc (or GameCube game, in some contexts), but stored in a sparse, space-saving format.
To play WBFS files, you need an external storage device, such as a USB external hard drive (HDD), a solid-state drive (SSD), or a high-capacity SD card. 1. Choose the Right File System
Creating and using WBFS files on the Wii requires a few pieces of software and some technical know-how. Here's a step-by-step guide:
The easiest way to get started with .wbfs files is using the Wii Backup Manager (Windows). Here’s how:
GameCube games use a different file structure. On your FAT32 drive, you need to create a folder named games on the root. Inside that, each game must have its own folder: /games/Game Name [GameID]/ and the game file must be named game.iso . You can manage GameCube games using USB Loader GX combined with "Nintendont".
The log wasn't a log. It was a diary.