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In: Xbox 360
7 Jun 2009Anyone who is the owner of a Xbox 360 is acquainated with its “characteristics”. As amazing as it is it can be noisy, often stops functioning (red ring of death, anyone?) and can have cooling problems. Some of us, however, are knowledgeable in another of its not so likeable characteristics: sometimes the DVD drive itself marks the game disks as it turns them. This can result in anything from comparatively minor, aesthetic damage to a scrape that makes the disc unusable. Granted that the Xbox DVD drives already have a hard time sometimes reading games that are in anything below flawless condition, even a minor scrape can have catastrophic results. The solution I have found that has worked best is to play Xbox 360 backup games instead.
Make backup copies of your Xbox, PlayStation, Wii, etc. games today! Click to find out how!
Data on game disks is so plentiful that it has to be made more compact and super saturated so that it can fit. Furthermore, games are designed in such a way that they require to access information constantly from anywhere on the disc. There is no way to “jump” past a ruined segment, as with DVD’s, for games are not segmental. There is literally very little chance to tell when a scrape has hit a particularly destructive region on the surface of the disc until it is too late, neither is there any form to prevent scratches from ever happening. Anything from packaging to safeguarding to handling to youngsters to pets can damage a game, to an important degree alterning its gameplay or rendering it forever unusable.
The best way and only way to prevent damaging your game disks is to never employ them anyhow, to play Xbox 360 backup games in their place. Making a backup is not just entirely legal if you own the game yet it is relatively uncomplicated, requiring just a given computer application and a computer. It does not indeed require the placement of a Mod chip. You are able to follow all the necessary steps unsupervised.
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