Oh man, where to even start with this MIG Flash thing? So, picture this—some crew, I think they’re called X or something, decided to say, “Hey, guess what? This MIG Flash thing works with Nintendo Switch 2 now!” They threw out a teaser, like, “Yeah, sure. Works with Switch 2.” But honestly, not a clue how they pulled it off. Maybe some sneaky firmware update? Who knows. Anyway—wait, lost my train of thought there for a sec. Oh right, the ’splanation bit!
The MIG Flash. Yeah. Imagine a thing that lets you run game backups (yeahhhh, let’s not dig into that too deep) on your Switch. Basically, it pretends to be one of those official Nintendo game cartridges. Kinda shady, kinda genius? Depends on your perspective. People thought it was just for folks making personal backups or wannabe game developers, but surprise, surprise, some pirates got their grubby hands on it too. Not sayin’ that’s cool, just mentioning.
At first, people were like, “Nah, this won’t work with Switch 2.” But then, boom, the X folks demoed it running some Zelda thing—Echoes of something. Took forever to load, though. They said it’s like plug-and-play now on their website. Sounds kinda smooth, or so they claim. I’m skeptical, though. I mean, they must’ve updated the firmware to dodge new Switch 2 checks. But hey, don’t expect miracles, like running Switch 2 games ’cause that’s not happening. Plus, legal stuff—definitely illegal to dump those ROMs (just saying).
So, the nitty-gritty? It’s kinda risky business. If you use the MIG Flash or whatever on Switch 2, there’s a big ol’ risk of Nintendo smacking you with a ban. Each game cart’s got a unique ID, and Nintendo ain’t playin’ around. They’ll catch onto it if you share IDs across consoles. Not only might your account get banned, but your console could end up as a very expensive paperweight.
Anyway, back to reality. If you’re into techy news and how-tos, just follow Tom’s Hardware on Google News, I guess. Stay in the loop with whatever’s cooking. Alright, I’m out.