<p>Review for World of Goo on WiiWare.<br>Taken from Official Nintendo Magazine 38 - January 2009 (UK) </p><p>I can't wait for the sequel to release on Switch.</p><p>This issue can be downloaded here:<br><a href="https://www.outofprintarchive.com/catalogue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.outofprintarchive.com/catalogue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.outofprintarchive.com/cata</span><span class="invisible">logue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/retrogaming/" rel="tag">#retrogaming</a> <br><a href="/tags/nintendo/" rel="tag">#Nintendo</a> <br><a href="/tags/wii/" rel="tag">#Wii</a></p>
wii
<p>Preview for Little King's Story on Wii.<br>Taken from Official Nintendo Magazine 38 - January 2009 (UK) </p><p>This issue can be downloaded here:<br><a href="https://www.outofprintarchive.com/catalogue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.outofprintarchive.com/catalogue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.outofprintarchive.com/cata</span><span class="invisible">logue/OfficialNintendoMagazine.html</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/retrogaming/" rel="tag">#retrogaming</a> <br><a href="/tags/nintendo/" rel="tag">#Nintendo</a> <br><a href="/tags/wii/" rel="tag">#Wii</a></p>
<p>My favourite experience regarding Wii homebrew so far has to be NetBSD. I wanted to use my Wii as a computer for a while now, and NetBSD being available as an operating system you can install and get going on an SD card and a Wii with the HBC is definitely the highlights of my Wii homebrew experience. I don't use my Wii much at the moment, as I don't even have a monitor I can use for my Wii yet, but I have used it for a while on a TV and it was nice.</p><p>Networking is a bit hard, at least on the Wii however. I tried to get WiFi included in as a Wii image of NetBSD to burn, this was during my time on FreeBSD, and I just couldn't compile it. I was doing something weird where I would alternate between GCC and clang but that would have been a waste of time once it got to booting.</p><p>Other than that, it was nice writing a fetch program entirely written in C using vi and man pages to get by. It was a nice break from writing things without an LSP to help, although I still love using modern features many editors provide, obviously excluding AI, so I will stick with that. I also found that Lua existed on it which definitely helped whenever I didn't want to write C.</p><p>First *BSD post in a while, as I forgot to talk about the time I used NetBSD. I'll probably talk about Linux more at some point but I wanted to talk about *BSD a little again. Try NetBSD if you get the chance!</p><p><a href="/tags/netbsd/" rel="tag">#netbsd</a> <a href="/tags/homebrew/" rel="tag">#homebrew</a> <a href="/tags/wii/" rel="tag">#wii</a> <a href="/tags/tech/" rel="tag">#tech</a> <a href="/tags/computers/" rel="tag">#computers</a> <a href="/tags/programming/" rel="tag">#programming</a></p>