
- #CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK UPDATE#
- #CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK SOFTWARE#
- #CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK CODE#
- #CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK PLUS#
(NFC, or near-field communication, is a high-frequency form of RFID that allows data transmission between two electronic devices using radio waves.)
#CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK PLUS#
I ultimately spent around $50 plus shipping for what’s known as a RFID toaster and a pile of NFC “power tags,” which are basically data transmission devices.
#CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK SOFTWARE#
After countless YouTube tutorials and some investigation into free software tools, I decided to bite the bullet and see what I could get my hands on. This is when I fell down the dark and winding rabbit hole that is amiibo hacking, whereby through some mix of hardware and software you can emulate Nintendo’s official toys. I owned the games, but not the toys Photo by Nick Statt / The Verge So in a way, I wasn’t the right kind of Zelda fan to access Breath of the Wild’s most coveted and secret treasure. My only transgression is not owning any of the available Zelda amiibo. I consider myself one of those fans, having played nearly every major and minor installment in the series since I was six years old. When I looked into what it would take to get these items for myself, I discovered that I’d have to spend perhaps hundreds of dollars on eBay just to own something seemingly created only to reward the most diehard of Zelda fans. It’s all there, waiting for you to have the right piece of Nintendo merchandise to access it.
#CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK UPDATE#
There is no patch to download, no software update to install.
#CEMU 1.7.5 BREARTH OF THE WILD SPEED HACK CODE#
And yet these items exist, baked into the game’s code straight out of the box.

You can’t buy Ocarina of Time downloadable content or pay $4.99 for that Hero’s Shield. Nintendo also doesn’t make the exclusive items in Breath of the Wild available for purchase in any other way. They’re rare collectible toys the company does not produce in large quantities and, because of this, a majority of them are sold out virtually everywhere. Because Nintendo is an unorthodox video game company with seemingly systemic supply constraints, you cannot easily purchase the necessary Zelda amiibo. Using amiibo, you can get your hands on gear from across the Zelda franchise, like the original outfit from the series’ first installment and the shield from Wind Waker.īut there are a few issues with the system. A strong sense of “I need this” bubbled up in me the first moment I saw Link’s iconic Hero’s Shield and Zelda’s limitless Light Bow, which I stumbled on in a Reddit thread just a few weeks ago. If you’re a big Zelda fan, these mostly cosmetic items have a distinct nostalgic value that’s hard to articulate and impossible to ignore. Here’s a handy chart showing exactly which amiibo grants you which exclusives. The items range from a giant sword and the horse Epona from the N64 classic Ocarina of Time to the tunic Link wears in the artwork for the original NES version of The Legend of Zelda.

In Breath of the Wild, they can be scanned once per day on your Switch or Wii U controller to initiate a drop of items and a treasure chest that has a random chance of containing an item exclusive to one of about a dozen different Zelda amiibo. These small NFC-equipped toys are collectibles, but they also double as a way to access special content in Nintendo games. Amiibo grant you the best loot in ‘Breath of the Wild’įirst, an amiibo primer is in order.
