To begin, please select your device below:
Good news! You can mod your console, and there's no important extra notes too!
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
PSP Go is known for having weird side effects, such as game suspension not working as intended.
You MIGHT be out of luck! This model is known to fail when it comes to modding, with a cheap build quality, zero internet support, and no permanent CFW patch.
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
Xenon motherboards are most commonly known as the Red Ring of Death machines, infamous for the common compacitor leaks.
Retail Xenons came with a 16 MB NAND flash chip, whereas non-retail consoles came with a 64 MB NAND flash.
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
Elpis motherboards are Xenon motherboards with fixes and tweaks here and there, but shouldn't be a problem when modding.
Elpis CAN still suffer from compacitor leaks, however, they aren't as common, being a refurbished Xenon
Good news! You can mod your console, and there's no important extra notes too!
Good news! You can mod your console, and there's no important extra notes too!
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
Most of these motherboards are known to be reliable, but some may come with leaky 16v 1500 µF Sanyo capacitors.
Some of these motherboards also came with an updated CB bootloader that patched the SMC (or "JTAG") Hack.
Good news! You can mod your console, and there's no important extra notes too!
Good news! You can mod your console, and there's no important extra notes too!
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
Most of these motherboards are known to be reliable, but if they have 4GB NAND flash chips, they may fail.
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
On Waitsburg and Stingray motherboards, the trace connecting the CPU's POST to the POST pad on the bottom of the motherboard has been removed, so you need to use a postfix adapter to be able to attach a pogo pin to the POST connection underneath the CPU. To determine if you need to do this, remove the heatsink.
There are two resistors required for RGH 2, which the Waitsburg and Stringray lack by default. You can get around this by bridging the points for R2C6 and R2C7.
To flash the NAND, different tools are required, which include: xFlasher 360, PicoFlasher, Element18592's 4GB USB tool, or an SD card tool.
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
On Waitsburg and Stingray motherboards, the trace connecting the CPU's POST to the POST pad on the bottom of the motherboard has been removed, so you need to use a postfix adapter to be able to attach a pogo pin to the POST connection underneath the CPU. To determine if you need to do this, remove the heatsink.
There are two resistors required for RGH 2, which the Waitsburg and Stringray lack by default. You can get around this by bridging the points for R2C6 and R2C7.
To flash the NAND, different tools are required, which include: xFlasher 360, PicoFlasher, Element18592's 4GB USB tool, or an SD card tool.
You're out of luck! On Winchester motherboards, the new Oban XCGPU integrated the eDRAM into the main die, shrunk the manufacturing process to 32 nm, and patched the "Reset Glitch Hack" by disabling many of the pins used for that exploit, which means you can't mod your console...
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
If your console is running 3.56 or later, you'll need to use a method of patching your console for the ability to install custom firmware updates.
You also have the option to install PS3HEN to run game backups and some homebrew. It is not very useful on fat consoles, as all models can use CFW anyway.
Good news! You can mod your console, however there are some things to know:
If your console is running 3.56 or later, you will need to check if your console is able to be flashed. Unlike the Fat, some PS3 Slims are too new for custom firmware support. You can only install CFW if the console has a minimum compatible firmware of 3.56 or lower. If you don't know what the console's minimum firmware is, you can check the back or bottom of the console for where it says "CECH-####", to find its model number. If your model number is 20XX or 21XX, it is always compatible with CFW. However, if your model number is 25XX, you will have to use BGToolSet or MinVerChk to check if it's compatible. Alternatively, if the manufacture date on the back/bottom is before April 2011, or the "Date Code" contains a 9, 0, or 1A, then the console is guaranteed to be compatible. The manufacturing date doesn't need to be checked on a 20XX or 21XX, as every single one will be made before 2011 anyway. If the model number is 30XX, it is impossible to install CFW.
You also have the option to install PS3HEN to run game backups and some homebrew. It is not very useful on fat consoles, as all models can use CFW anyway.
You're out of luck! It is impossible to downgrade to 3.55 and/or install CFW on Super Slims.
NOTICE: If you have a Switch Lite or a Switch OLED, you cannot mod it!
(To find your Switch serial, look on the bottom of the Switch's screen for a tag with numbers. That's your serial!)
If your serial beginning isn't listed here, your Switch is most likely unmoddable.
You're out of luck! In these consoles, there is a new motherboard that patches the only methods of modding.
Good news! The serial range you selected is not patched and you can happily mod your console!
You MIGHT be out of luck. Most of these consoles with this serial beginning are patched, however there are the lucky few that aren't!
You're out of luck. The consoles with the serial range you selected are patched.
You MIGHT be out of luck. Most of these consoles with this serial beginning are patched, however there are the lucky few that aren't!