• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Disc rot and the Wii U

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
So after years of procuring a few select Wii U games from flea markets and thrift stores, I finally made the leap and got me a Wii U for Father's Day. I cannot put into words the disappointment I have felt since yesterday afternoon. Nintendoland, Super Smash, Mario Maker, Super Mario U all appear to be in good to excellent condition, but give me a "invalid disc" notification when inserted into the console.

So of course something is wrong with the Wii U... right? I thought so and I contacted the seller. He was gracious enough to allow me to exchange.... same behavior. I found it odd that both these Wii U's would read all my 'Wii" games and Hyrule Warrior Wii U, so I dug a little deeper. It appears that Wii U disc's suffer from accelerated disc rot 😪. When you hold these disc's up to a bright light, you can numerous "pin holes" of light that pass through. Every disc I own (besides Hyrule Warriors) exhibits this defect.

I have come across a competing explanation that states these are manufacturing defects, but it does not seem probable that 4 out of 5 discs would have a defect of this nature. It greatly lowers my confidence that my disc based game collection will age with me gracefully through the years and has greatly motivated me to procure digital backups of my library. Has anyone else had this issue? I have disassembled and cleaned my lens with no beneficial effects, has anyone else solved this problem for themselves? Is this our physical future?
 
Last edited:
So after years of procuring a few select Wii U games from flea markets and thrift stores, I finally made the leap and got me a Wii U for Father's Day. I cannot put into words the disappointment I have felt since yesterday afternoon. Nintendoland, Super Smash, Mario Maker, Super Mario U all appear to be in good to excellent condition, but give me a "invalid disc" notification when inserted into the console.

So of course something is wrong with the Wii U... right? I thought so and I contacted the seller. He was gracious enough to allow me to exchange.... same behavior. I found it odd that both these Wii U's would read all my 'Wii" games and Hyrule Warrior Wii U, so I dug a little deeper. It appears that Wii U disc's suffer from accelerated disc rot 😪. When you hold a these disc's up to a bright light, you can numerous "pin holes" of light that pass through. Every disc I own (besides Hyrule Warriors) exhibits this defect.

I have come across a competing explanation that states these are manufacturing defects, but it does not seem probable that 4 out of 5 discs would have a defect of this nature. It greatly lowers my confidence that my disc based game collection will age with me gracefully through the years and has greatly motivated me to procure digital backups of my library. Has anyone else had this issue? I have disassembled and cleaned my lens with no beneficial effects, has anyone else solved this problem for themselves? Is this our physical future?
That sucks. Softmod it and play the games off an HDD. WiiU is awesome and home to some fantastic gems.
 

Dirk Benedict

Gold Member
So after years of procuring a few select Wii U games from flea markets and thrift stores, I finally made the leap and got me a Wii U for Father's Day. I cannot put into words the disappointment I have felt since yesterday afternoon. Nintendoland, Super Smash, Mario Maker, Super Mario U all appear to be in good to excellent condition, but give me a "invalid disc" notification when inserted into the console.

So of course something is wrong with the Wii U... right? I thought so and I contacted the seller. He was gracious enough to allow me to exchange.... same behavior. I found it odd that both these Wii U's would read all my 'Wii" games and Hyrule Warrior Wii U, so I dug a little deeper. It appears that Wii U disc's suffer from accelerated disc rot 😪. When you hold a these disc's up to a bright light, you can numerous "pin holes" of light that pass through. Every disc I own (besides Hyrule Warriors) exhibits this defect.

I have come across a competing explanation that states these are manufacturing defects, but it does not seem probable that 4 out of 5 discs would have a defect of this nature. It greatly lowers my confidence that my disc based game collection will age with me gracefully through the years and has greatly motivated me to procure digital backups of my library. Has anyone else had this issue? I have disassembled and cleaned my lens with no beneficial effects, has anyone else solved this problem for themselves? Is this our physical future?
Disc rot is a thing. There was a guy on Youtube that went into it deeply. He went into what goes into these discs and how the material breaks down over time, even if stored carefully. He even broke down a time frame of when the discs will start getting ruined. I wish I could remember the channel, but that's what I have for now.
 

Magic Carpet

Gold Member
I'm curious about the Switch carts logevity. And if it will be an issue.
I've had several usb thumb drives go bad over the years.
Granted they were being used to play music in my car. And it can get extremely hot and cold in my car.
 

Big Baller

Al Pachinko, Konami President
d65aeb1f-b5e2-46e0-857e-957e5b1110e7.png
 

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
That sucks. Softmod it and play the games off an HDD. WiiU is awesome and home to some fantastic gems.
I'm in the process now. It sucks that the exposure that many of the best ROM sites have received (due to iPhone allowing emulation) have resulted in the most reliable ROM sites to purge much of its content. Now I'll have to wade through the malware and pop-up ladden sites and torrents that are left, to find backups.

Edit: is the discussion of legitimate backups, of discs you own, against the rules here?
 
Last edited:

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
While this is a thing, it's more likely than not the previous owners handling them poorly. If you take care of your discs, they'll outlast you.
I'm very picky with my disc selection. All five disc's "look" to be in good to excellent condition.

Disc rot is a thing. There was a guy on Youtube that went into it deeply. He went into what goes into these discs and how the material breaks down over time, even if stored carefully. He even broke down a time frame of when the discs will start getting ruined. I wish I could remember the channel, but that's what I have for now.
Please link if you happen to recall the creator.
 
Last edited:

Guilty_AI

Member
While this is a thing, it's more likely than not the previous owners handling them poorly. If you take care of your discs, they'll outlast you.
Lies, i always kept my disks in their proper packaging, never left them laying around for no reason and always stored the boxes in the proper places. Some still suffered at the hands of time regardless, quality of the disk itself probably plays a role here.
 
Last edited:

Dirk Benedict

Gold Member
I'm very picky with my disc selection. All five disc's "look" to be in good to excellent condition.


Please link if you happen to recall the creator.

Trying to find it, now, but I don't see him in the images. He is a younger dude with glasses and with chin to shoulder length hair. I also recall it's not just wii U discs. What happens is the material begins to 'flake' and break off the disc, naturally IIRC.
 

The Shepard

Member
I've played loads of old PS3 games past few years and my PS3 recognises every one of them and that consoles way older than the Wii U. It must be Nintendo cheaping out on the disc format for the Wii U and going with something different than blu ray. Scary shit if your a collector for that console.
 

Drew1440

Member
Some Wii U models can also have issues with the NAND wearing out (Internal Storage), it's highly recommended to softmod the console and rip your backups to an external USB hard drive for full longevity of the console. For the Wii U there is also homebrew software that lets you download games from the eShop servers, if you find you cannot play your physical copies of games. Whilst it shouldn't be used for piracy, it's useful if your discs cannot be used.
 

Dirk Benedict

Gold Member
I've played loads of old PS3 games past few years and my PS3 recognises every one of them and that consoles way older than the Wii U. It must be Nintendo cheaping out on the disc format for the Wii U and going with something different than blu ray. Scary shit if your a collector for that console.
For what it is worth, I do not think we have explored this topic enough. Not on GAF and probably not on most other places.
 

xrnzaaas

Member
I wouldn't be surprised if low quality discs were used. It's kinda the same with games from old 1990s-2000s magazines - some discs aren't readable or they struggle, while discs from the retail PC releases from the same years can still work flawlessly.

The best way is to just mod the console to avoid launching games from discs.
 
Last edited:

The_hunter

Member
Some Wii U models can also have issues with the NAND wearing out (Internal Storage), it's highly recommended to softmod the console and rip your backups to an external USB hard drive for full longevity of the console. For the Wii U there is also homebrew software that lets you download games from the eShop servers, if you find you cannot play your physical copies of games. Whilst it shouldn't be used for piracy, it's useful if your discs cannot be used.
How hard is it to mod a wii u? Not asking how, but the difficulty of it.
 
Last edited:

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
I've played loads of old PS3 games past few years and my PS3 recognises every one of them and that consoles way older than the Wii U. It must be Nintendo cheaping out on the disc format for the Wii U and going with something different than blu ray. Scary shit if your a collector for that console.
I have a decent collection of PS1, PS2, PS3, Dreamcast, 360, and Wii discs. No problems with disc rot on any game in my collection, so I agree. Nintendo had to have cheaped out somewhere in the materials they choose for their Wii U games.

How hard is it to mod a wii u? Not asking how, but the difficulty of it.
Looking into it now. So far, doesn't seem anymore complex than the Wii, but we will see when I get into it. The console that gave me the most problems by far, was the PS2. I don't know if the PS2 is always as difficult to mod or I was using bad info. I ended up having to find an image of a modded PS2 HDD and completely copy that to my HDD.
 
Last edited:

cireza

Member
Quickly checked my Wii U games, 4 of them have a single spot close to the center of the disc. Not sure if this is an issue yet or not considering their location.

Concerning SEGA-CD and Saturn (US), I have always been wary of the foam insert. These things are abrasive. I never let them inside the case.
 
Last edited:

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
Quickly checked my Wii U games, 4 of them have a single spot close to the center of the disc. Not sure if this is an issue yet or not considering their location.

Concerning SEGA-CD and Saturn (US), I have always been wary of the foam insert. These things are abrasive. I never let them inside the case.
I would imagine the pinhole's location is relevant to its operation. The few I saw discussing this topic mentioned you don't want these defects near the edge of the disc.
 

nush

Member
While this is a thing, it's more likely than not the previous owners handling them poorly. If you take care of your discs, they'll outlast you.

Not in this case, despite the low install base people back in the day were reporting this on brand new games. So far I've only had it with one used game.
 

BlackTron

Member
So, you thought the silver lining to buying all those Wii U games that got ported to Switch anyway might be collector value. Think again!
 

Quantum253

Gold Member
Dang, that sucks! I'll have to go through my WiiU collection now. Hopefully all is well, but it sounds like a common problem that doesn't seem to be mentioned often when buying WiiU disc's
 

Quantum253

Gold Member
So, you thought the silver lining to buying all those Wii U games that got ported to Switch anyway might be collector value. Think again!
That certainly dampers any value held on WiiU, especially NIB if you cannot confirm the disc is actually in playable condition. At that point your buying the box and CE content
 

BlackTron

Member
That certainly dampers any value held on WiiU, especially NIB if you cannot confirm the disc is actually in playable condition. At that point your buying the box and CE content

I'm one of those suckers with a stack of like 10 WiiU games, so this sucks. Never really worried about anything because they're all barely handled and bought new by me. Oh well
 

Quasicat

Member
I was really big into laserdiscs from the 80s to the early 2010s. What always frustrates me is when people blame how the disc is handled, when at least for laserdiscs, it was the manufacturer. It didn’t matter who produced the movie, because they were pressed in a handful of facilities in Japan and the United States. One disc manufacturer that everyone avoided Was Sony Digital Audio Disc Corporation. If you bought a movie that was manufactured from this company, there was a very high likelihood that disc rot would happen. What caused it was the cheap glue that was used to assemble both sides of the plastic disc together; air would get between the platters and would eat away at the aluminum substrate.

I kept my discs in perfect condition, in a temperature and humidity controlled environment, and still a handful of movies from a whole range of movie companies had disc rot.

It’s very likely that Nintendo was the only manufacturer of Wii U discs due to the security involved creating anti-copy discs, this could make it more likely for these games to suffer this problem.
 

Hunter 99

Member
I tested my wii u a couple of months back and my games still worked fine on mine.might need to check all the discs though now and see if all are working and if they have the holes or dots...
Shame though,wanted to keep hold of my collection but could be a sell now....
 

Dr. Claus

Banned
While this is a thing, it's more likely than not the previous owners handling them poorly. If you take care of your discs, they'll outlast you.

Yep. I still have discs from consoles that supposedly have the *worst* Disk Rot chances possible. Thousands of disc based games. All of them are perfect and work just fine. Take care of your things and they will last your life time and beyond.
 
Unfortunately every single physical man made object in the world has an expiration date. Sucks that you experienced that OP, especially with video games. I have lost several games to this and a shit ton more music CDs. Over the next 50 years, all disc based media will probably be non-existent.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
For the people supporting physical, go ahead. There's pros and cons to physical and digital.

But one negative point to physical is all the clutter of consoles and potential of broken hardware or media. Why not buy those games as BC on modern consoles or if it's available for Steam download if you enjoy them that much?
 
Last edited:
I've played loads of old PS3 games past few years and my PS3 recognises every one of them and that consoles way older than the Wii U. It must be Nintendo cheaping out on the disc format for the Wii U and going with something different than blu ray. Scary shit if your a collector for that console.
Yep, I have bought a ton of wii, ps2, ps1, xbox360 and Xbox games from flee markets, mom and pop game shops, and antique stores, recently, and all have worked fine. My ps3 games on the shelf work too. Never owned a wii u so no idea about it's issues.
 
Last edited:

MarkMe2525

Gold Member
Yep. I still have discs from consoles that supposedly have the *worst* Disk Rot chances possible. Thousands of disc based games. All of them are perfect and work just fine. Take care of your things and they will last your life time and beyond.
The evidence doesn't support this conclusion. There are other variables besides the handling of the disks, most importantly, the materials used when pressing the disc. You literally have people in here describing that great care that was taken with their discs, and they still became unreadable.
 
Last edited:

Dr. Claus

Banned
The evidence doesn't support this conclusion. There are other variables besides the handling of the disks, most importantly, the materials used when pressing the disc. You literally have people in here describing that great care that was taken with their discs, and they still became unreadable.

Mate, I have the same discs they have. Mine are still in good condition as are tens of thousands of others who have the games.
 

Vick

Member
I've played loads of old PS3 games past few years and my PS3 recognises every one of them and that consoles way older than the Wii U.
I have a decent collection of PS1, PS2, PS3, Dreamcast, 360, and Wii discs. No problems with disc rot on any game in my collection, so I agree.
Age means very little in this case, just had a blast with a '97 PSX game and right after a '03 PS2 one with no issues whatsoever.

They still look great via component on the plasma, too.
 
Top Bottom