Author Topic: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection  (Read 16422 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Phillyman

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 10
    • Retromags.com
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #15 on: February 25, 2007, 09:36:25 PM »
Hello,

I am the Administrator of www.retromags.com . We have scanned over 100,000 pages of video game magazines and are still going strong. I would like to review your product. Your banner has been on my website for the past year and I stand behind your products

Thanks
Phillyman
www.retromags.com - Over 129 Nintendo Powers Released!

Offline Guyfawkes

  • Neo-Newbie
  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 17
    • http://www.emuholic.com/
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #16 on: February 26, 2007, 05:20:43 AM »
You can find my review of the MK-5 on Emuboards at http://www.emuboards.com/invision/index.php?showtopic=28259


MK5 Giga Review

The MK5 Giga (MK5 from now on) is the latest in the long line of flashcards by Neoflash. It features:
* Support clean ROMs, no need for patching, just need drag and drop
* Huge memory space, from 8Gbit up to 64Gbit
* USB 2.0 high-speed data transfer
* USB disk function, compatible with any operation system
* Built in Moonshell v1.5 and is upgradable
* Supports homebrew
* Built in SMS multi save function, and auto save
* Menu upgradable, just need drag and drop the new core to MK5
* Multi ROM support, media play support
* MK5 turbo engine, 100% full game running speed, without any delay
* Built in PassMe function, can boot most GBA flash cart perfectly



What’s in the box?

The MK5 comes in a plastic container which can be reused if needed. Inside are the two devices; the MK5 Giga Slot 1 flash cartridge and the MK5 USB Slot 2 cartridge. There is also a USB cable for connecting your PC to the Slot 2 USB cartridge and a CD containing some software.




The MK5 Giga

I am reviewing the MK5 8Gbit Giga, this translated to PC size is 1GB, a second larger size is also available with 16Gbit (2GB PC size) of storage which costs a little extra.

The build quality of both the Slot 1 and Slot 2 cartridges are both good, in particular the build quality of the Slot 1 cartridge has improved over the previous MK-4 device which looked and felt a bit cheap. This cartridge looks and feels like an official DS cart and is identical in design.


 


The Slot 2 cartridge is GBA size so it will stick out on a DS Lite, as you will see further on in the review you only need it when you are transferring files and it can be removed any other time. Like the Slot 1 cart the build quality is good and the mini USB socket at the top of the cartridge is properly placed and looks good.





Setting up the MK5 Giga

The MK5 is a bit different to the recent Slot 1 based flashcards, the majority now uses some kind of removable media such as Micro-SD and the DS-Xtreme uses built in flash memory which is exactly what the MK5 uses. The difference is that the MK5 doesn’t access the Slot 1 cart via a built in USB port but it instead uses the Slot 2 cartridge to act as a linker between the DS and your PC.

Basically what you do is insert both the Slot 1 and Slot 2 cartridges into your DS and then connect the USB cable to the Slot 2 cart and your PC USB port. When first switched on your PC should recognise the MK5 as removable media. You can now transfer files to and from the MK5 as you normally would with removable media. No PC side software such as a ROM patcher is required so the MK5 can be used on any operating system that supports removable media.

Once you have finished transferring files to the MK5 you can switch off your DS. Before switching it on again you need to remove the Slot 2 cart otherwise you will be started in the above file transfer mode, even if there is no USB cable connected. I found this quite annoying that you have to insert and remove the Slot 2 cartridge every time you want to transfer a file, it would have been a very useful idea to have a menu option to choose to initiate the file transfer mode or not. This way you can keep the Slot 2 cart inserted at all times if needed.



A tour of the MK5 menu

Upon switching on the DS with the Slot 1 cart inserted (don’t forget to remove the Slot 2 cart) the menu software will proceed to load. The FAT (filesystem) initialisation process takes around five seconds, once completed the menu is displayed. On the top DS screen the currently selected ROM information is shown, from top to bottom; the ROM icon, the ROM filename, its file size, its save type, last save date, its cartridge code and finally the page number you are currently on.

The bottom DS screen shows the ROMs found on the cartridge, each ROM is shown as a 3D box using the ROM icon as the texture. Twelve boxes are displayed on each Page and they all rotate, the current selected ROM box pulses in and out.




Navigation can be performed with both the DS D-Pad+buttons and/or stylus, the D-Pad is used to move between each box, you then press the A button or touch the screen to load the selected ROM. To move to the next or previous page if you have more than twelve ROMS you need to press the Left or Right shoulder buttons, strangely despite icons to indicate moving page at the top and bottom of the screen you can’t touch them with the stylus. And last but not least is Select+Left or Right D-Pad which changes the save type for the currently selected ROM, more information on this further on in the review.

Once you have chosen a ROM to load, the game boots almost instantly providing you haven’t changed to another ROM. If you have changed ROM, the software will write a save file in .SAV format so it is backed up to be reused, if a SAV file is found for the new ROM it will automatically be loaded into the save memory. There is a configurable setting in the .ini file to force a Save backup each time the MK5 is booted but this will add an extra second or two to the boot time.

The design of the menu is pretty bland, the majority of Slot 1 carts now have some form of customisable skins and features but the MK5 only allows you to customise the text colour. While it is not a necessity it would have been nice to see the menu put to better use with some features found in other carts such as custom skins, an improved layout with some more features or quick boot option or icons for your favourite software. Overall the software is very easy to use and for someone new to flashcards they should be able to use this without need of the manual.


Performance

ROM Compatibility
I have tested a handful of games which comprise of some random games, games known to have problems on various flashcards and finally some games that were released after the latest firmware version to check how good the compatibility is.

Before I list the test results, now is a good time to explain the save type select feature I briefly mentioned earlier. The MK5 differs from other flashcards by having a database of each ROM release and it’s save type, when a ROM is scanned it checks the database for its respective entry and sets the save type automatically. If the ROM is not found you will need to manually set this by pressing Select+Left or Right on the D-Pad to change the selected ROM save type, this setting is then saved for future use.

This seems to have its advantages and disadvantages in that until a new database is released you will have to make settings as described above for new ROMs when they are released, but it does have the advantage that new ROMs that may not work with the usual automatic patching found in other flashcards but you could do so with the manual settings that the MK5 features. This became apparent in my tests when Diddy Kong Racing for example was unrecognised (released after the latest database update at the time) and I had to manually set the save type, I read with one or two other popular flashcards that it did not work.

42 All Time Classics – Works
Advance War s – Works
Animal Crossing - Works
Big Brain Academy – Works
Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin - Works
Diddy Kong Racing - Works
Elite Beat Agents – Works
Final Fantasy III – Works
Hotel Dusk: Room 215 – Works
Lunar Knights - Works
Magnetica - Works
Mario Kart DS – Works
New Zealand Story - Works
Super Mario 64 DS- Works
Tetris DS – Test
Ultimate Spiderman – Works
Underground Pool - Works

The makers claim 100% compatibility and posted a full list of commercial ROMs which all apparently tested as working. While it’s impractical to test every game, I couldn’t find or read about any that didn’t work including ROMs that were released after the firmware had been updated.

Homebrew Compatibility
Initially the MK5 didn’t support DLDI, this is a file system that aims to work on as many flashcarts as possible and gives developers an all in one library to access the flashcart storage. Since starting this review, the resources needed to make it compatible have been released and the MK5 now supports DLDI.
Other homebrew that doesn’t use DLDI seems to work fine. I tried the Drunken Coders Christmas Competition results and out of the 18 entries, 16 of them worked. As a comparison the Micro NinjaDS run all 18.

Firmware upgrading
Firmware upgrading is performed by running an update ROM which is loaded the same way you would with any other ROM. A confirmation screen is displayed and once accepted, the process takes approximately five seconds showing its status of the update along the way. I did not experience any other problems doing this. Incidentally you can use the DSLinker firmware which the MK5 Giga is based on.

Other features
There are a couple of extras to be found in the MK5, Moonshell is pre-installed on the cartridge and is ready to use straight away. Since its release there are two new programs which allow you to use the DS as a Joypad and Mouse on your PC. This is done by connecting the USB cable as you would when transfering files and then running the respective ROMs. Your PC will then recognise your DS as a Joypad or Mouse and you can control your PC with it.


Conclusion

I found the MK5 to be much better than what I was expecting, the claims of 100% compatibility seemed far fetched and I was expecting to find at least some games that do not work but I couldn’t. Homebrew support is great as it supports DLDI and runs other homebrew that doesn’t require access to the FAT. One concern I have is that Neoflash do not give the necessary support with firmware updates when needed, the support for their MK-4 was very poor so be aware of this.

The price of the MK5 is very competitive; at just $49.99 for the 8Gbit and $59.99 for the 16Gbit compared to $100 for the 4Gbit DS-Xtreme you are getting double the storage space for half the price. Even compared to SD based Slot 1 Cards once you take into consideration buying a 1GB SD card the price is around the same as the MK5 if not slightly more expensive. Full marks and more for the MK5 here as its excellent value for money.

Apart from my gripes with the menu I can’t really find any major faults with the MK5, it’s got good build quality, very easy to use, excellent compatibility and the price is excellent. I would recommend one if you want something different to a SD based cart such as the NinjaDS or M3 Simply.

Final Score: 9 out of 10

Additional Links:
Homepage: http://www.neoflash.com/
Stores selling the MK5 Giga: http://www.ic2005.com/
DLDI Homepage - http://chishm.drunkencoders.com/DLDI/index.html

This review may not be copied and pasted elsewhere without prior permission, please link to this review instead.
« Last Edit: February 27, 2007, 11:51:02 PM by Dr.neo »
http://www.emuholic.com/ -  All the latest hacking, emulation and homebrew news for many consoles.

Offline zebra

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 9
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #17 on: February 27, 2007, 03:09:40 PM »
Hi Dr. Neo.

We actually applied for the Mk 4 mini a long, long, long time ago. We were accepted as affiliates - but were never sent a review kit. You can see the thread in the Mk 4 review kit section.

Anyways - I'm zebra, from speedlabs.org. Most of the industry know us as a hardware hacking site, for optical drives and next generation storage technologies. We are a group of dedicated, challenging, motivated individuals who's aim is to get the VERY most from our hardware, in all it's forms.

We'd be VERY interested to take the new NeoFlash MK5 inhouse for review (A full 15 - 20 page review, as are our standards) including history, background etc.

We were already given the banners to use on our site by boblen for our planned MK4 review - who just seems to have disappeared :(.

In terms of exposure, speedlabs.org is one of the most visited storage related pages in the world - with the respect of companies such as Pioneer, BenQ, LiteOn, NEC etc. Our HPM is close to one million. Current site stats:

1,546 Posts in 1,908 Topics by 5,945 Members. Come and check the site stats out for yourself, at the actual page.

We've been around for about 4 years now - with the member database and hit per month ratio's continually growing by the month.

As far as review ethic goes, we like to get into the details. We are not the kind of review site that will say "it played backups well" or "it was very compatible". We go several steps further, analysing the very nature of the hardware. How it works, how it performs, WHY it works...etc. We are by nature, those who tinker. We enjoy EEPROM flash work, firmware modification/checksum validation work...and in general getting the most from our hardware!

I very much look forward to the opportunity to test and review your product. Please contact me directly here (via PM, I assume) if you are interested, or want more information.

Come visit us! http://www.speedlabs.org

z.

Offline Golin

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 3
    • Los Wades
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #18 on: February 28, 2007, 12:43:23 AM »
I'm the webmaster and reviewer of http://www.loswades.frih.net. It is a relatively new site and we do both hardware and software reviews. I sent an email regarding to this, but I think it would be better to request a review kit using the manufacturer's method and that it would be more respectful towards you. We now have five reviewers including myself. I have written a review on the M3 DS Simply and have also requested review kits from various other flash cart manufacturers.

My method for reviewing it simple and to the point, but not too general. I feel it is better to get the point across to potential consumers whether the product is good or bad, but it will be thorough.

If you would prefer I personally write the review for the MK5 8G, please inform me in advance as I write them on a first come first serve basis so that I can get sufficient review time for each product. If not, the MK5 may be given to another reviewer for testing. Thank you.
« Last Edit: February 28, 2007, 12:45:11 AM by Golin »

Offline KR155E

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 27
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #19 on: March 05, 2007, 04:38:36 PM »
I received my unit today, here's the review:
http://www.vr32.de/modules/news/article.php?storyid=211

Again thank you very much for the unit, Dr. Neo! When the NEO 64 gets finished, I'd LOVE to write a review of it for 64DD.net. ;)


MK5 Giga Review
Posted by KR155E on 2007/3/5 23:39:41 
I have received a MK5 Giga 8Gb, the lastest Nintendo DS flash cart from NeoFlash, maker of a lot of backup units for many systems, and want to share my review of it with you guys.
The MK5 Giga is a Slot 1 Nintendo DS backup device with 8Gb (= 1 Gigabyte) of onboard Flash memory, there's also a 16Gb (= 2 Gigabyte) version available.


FEATURES

* Supports clean ROMs, no need for patching, just drag and drop
* Build in 8Gbit or 16Gbit memory
* USB 2.0 high-speed data transfer
* USB disk function, compatible with any operation system
* Built in Moonshell v1.5, upgradable
* Supports homebrew
* Built in SMS multi save function, and auto save
* Menu upgradeable, just drag and drop the new core to MK5
* Multi ROM support, media play support
* MK5 turbo engine, 100% full game running speed, without any delay
* Built in PassMe function, can boot most GBA flash cart perfectly


CONTENT

MK5 Giga comes with the cart itself, a GBA cart with an USB interface to connect to the PC, an USB cable and a 8cm CD-R with docs and more in a shiny, colorful plastic packaging. It fits perfectly into Slot 1, the Slot 2 USB connector sticks out a bit since it is the size of a standard GBA cartridge. That doesn't really matter, though, since you need that only to connect your MK5 to your PC.









SETUP

The MK5 Giga is ready for action once you take it out of the box, it has several games and programs on it by default. If you want to put your own Roms on it, just put the 8Gb cart in Slot 1, the USB interface cart ind Slot 2, then connect it to a free USB port on your Computer. Now turn on your DS and start the MK5 Giga. If you have Windows XP, it should now see it as an external drive, for other OS, there are drivers on the CD-R. Now just copy and paste your Roms over to the cart and you're ready to go. I was able to fit a whopping TWENTY random games on the cart, if you got the 16Gb version, you even have twice that much space.





 


USAGE

Every game I tested worked like a charm. I can't test the other 850+ Roms as well, but it is said that EVERY Rom released so far works on the MK5 Giga!

The unit can't detect the savetypes of Roms and gets its information from a databse saved on the cart. Since not all games are in there yet, you sometimes have to test all different settings (you can change save types by holding select and pressing left or right) until saving works. A bit annoying, but you can always get the latest savelib here, where you can also find a compatability chart.

When you boot up your cart, you're going to the cart menu after a short loading pause, where you can select between 3D blocks, which represent the games on your cart, while you can see additional info aboout the highlighted game on the top screen. It's not beautiful, but it does the job.





If you have a Slot 2 (GBA) flash cart as well, the MK5 Giga can also act as a Passme device to boot those. All you have to do is run the Passme image from the MK5's main menu.


CONCLUSION

The MK5 Giga is a very good choice if you don't want to play GBA games, and don't need rumble or extra RAM which for exaple the EZ Flash Triple pak offers. Compared to other units it is very cheap with around 60 EUR for the 16Gb version, which it is definitely worth.

+ Very high compatability
+ Easy usage
+ Pretty cheap compared to other units
- No GBA support


For more info on the MK5 Giga and other NeoFlash products, visit their website:


 
« Last Edit: March 14, 2007, 11:53:27 AM by Dr.neo »

Offline geezup

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 34
    • No-intro Screenshot Archive
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #20 on: March 07, 2007, 05:23:40 PM »
Hi there.

Well, i'm applying for this with little hope since i never heard back from you after being accepted and affiliated to review the MK4 mini and Neo 2.

I'm the webmaster/owner of No-intro Screenshot Archive (http://no-intro.dlgsoftware.net) a website with the sole purpose of archiving all screenshots and artwork (boxart and cartridge scans) for all the systems included in the No-intro team DAT files.

We are currently adding reviews of some other slot-1 flash carts, and this one would be a nice one to add.

cheers

Hope i'll have more luck this time.
No-intro Screenshot Archive
http://no-intro.dlgsoftware.net

Offline zebra

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 9
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #21 on: March 07, 2007, 09:32:31 PM »
Hi there.

Well, i'm applying for this with little hope since i never heard back from you after being accepted and affiliated to review the MK4 mini and Neo 2.

Same situation here geezup. I don't think it was Dr.neo's fault. I have a feeling the person looking after all this for us disappeared :(.

Hopefully Dr. Neo can help us out.

Cheers.

z.

Offline Golin

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 3
    • Los Wades
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #22 on: March 07, 2007, 10:15:12 PM »
Well KR155E got his review kit, so I'm guessing the NeoFlash team is making sure the kits they have already sent out are actually being reviewed and not just used personally with not intent on reviewing their product. It's a safety procedure and from an economic and business prospective, it's logical.

Offline bandit

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 25
    • DCEmu Reviews
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #23 on: March 08, 2007, 08:36:53 AM »
Received mine yesterday or day before. I will have review up shortly.

Offline DuoDreamer

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 15
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #24 on: March 08, 2007, 11:45:15 PM »
Hello everyone, I've posted my review of the MK5 kit.

You can view it here:

http://duo.gbadev.org/neoflashmk5.html




March 5, 2007 - NeoFlash MK5 Review   
 


Wonderful New Toy
I received year MK5 NDS flash kit recently for review from Dr. Neo At www.neoflash.com. I' ve almost always had year enjoyable experiment with to their flash card products, and the MK5 is No exception. It took has me few extra days to receive the package, thanks to some address confusion, and then UPS left the package one my back door and I didn' T see it At first. Oh well. I opened up the package and found has Nice little clamshell blister pack and has bag with has USB link cable.





Inside the package there is has minis-CD with has bunch of MK related files, year 8-Gbit MK5 GIGA Slot-1 Card, and has Slot-2 Cart with has mini USB port. At first I was has bit confused have to how the hardware stored dated, thinking that the Slot-1 card was just another passme device. I was quite wrong. The Slot-1 DS Card holds has complete passme and the 8-GBit (1-GByte) gold 16-GBit of flash memory.






Features (listed from packaging)
Support Romanian clean, not need any patch, just need drag and drop
Huge memory space, from 8gbit upto 64gbit
USB 2.0 High-Speed Dated Transfer
USB Disk Function, Compatible with any Operating System
Build in the last Moonshell v1.5 and upgradable
Homebrew Support
Build In SMS Multi Save Function, and Save Car
Small Upgradable, just need Drag and Drop the new core to MK5
Romanian Multi Support, Media Play Support
MK5 Turbo Machine, 100% Full Game Running Speed, Without Any Delay
Build In Passme Function, edge boot almost GBA Flash Cart perfectly

Surely enough, these listed features are supported, although currently I edge only find 8 and 16-GBit versions and No larger. The device cam pre-loaded with MoonShell and DSOrganize, which give it great functionality right out of the box, all I had to C was Copy has few files to the device and they were ready to uses, almost.

The Slot-2 Cart with the USB port is primarily for one purpose - linking the DS to the PC to read and Write dated to the Slot-1 Card. When you plug the Slot-2 Cart in to the DS and start the DS card, you are greeted with nothing other than two lines of text one the lower screen, and has standard USB flash disk one your PC. That interfaces is quite handy. I like being whitebait to drag and drop files easily, and this card allows for it.





I tossed has few homebrew roms that I had onto the cart, along with has couple of games I cuts. The spins Copy speed was quite fast and not has burden At all, like copying files to any USB flash Memory Stick. Ounce the files were copied, I turned off the DS and removed the Slot-2 USB To adapt and turned the DS back one. Starting the DS Card, I was greeted with has finely screen that showed the DS files icons turned into moving cubic. Here is where I ran into my first problem. The control in the finely felt very slow fox trot with the D-pad. Ounce I switched to using the stylus one the screen to move and select files, the control felt better.






Compatability
Surprisingly enough, this wonderful cart played everything I threw At it, which was wonderful. There were No compatability resulting with games, and homebrew roms worked except for has small few. The latest MK5 firmware supports DLDI homebrew roms, which is has filesystem interface for multiple flash cards while keeping the programming interface the same for coders. Tools for converting video files for playback in Moonshell were included and I converted has few things to test the playback. Music Videos looked fairly good and sounded decent.

There is anotheruse for the USB link cart that goes into slot-2. While the cart is not needed to operate the hand Slot-1 card, you edge could it in and uses it have has USB Port for the DS for your own homebrew programs! Included with the package CD are tools and examples to uses it have has PC USB mouse gold joypad! That is definately has cool feature.


















Conclusion
The MK5 flash kit is really good for the money. At $49.99 it is has great been worth, have it is year entire 1GB worth of storage space for homebrew and games. Everything ran well one it and there were No delays gold exits while playing games. This cart is definately well worth the asking price. There is No support for GBA roms, goal thats really not has problem, I already cuts half has dozen slot-2 carts for that purpose that work well. Games and programs start up within has few seconds of choosing them.

 
 Posted by Duo 
« Last Edit: March 14, 2007, 12:39:09 PM by Dr.neo »

Offline ackix

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 11
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #25 on: March 09, 2007, 12:26:55 PM »
I received my MK5 today. I will review it at soon as possible.

This linker looks great :)

Offline ShinyL.

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 3
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #26 on: March 11, 2007, 01:13:24 AM »
Hi Dr.Neo , I'm ShinyL. from NDZ.it http://www.ndz.it/prova.php , we're glad to receive a test card for make a review of the MK5 . Thanx

Offline DjoeN

  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 215
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #27 on: March 13, 2007, 05:48:35 PM »
Reviews will be soon up: 1 English and 1 Dutch (should be up end of this week or this weekend)
Father, The Sleeper Has Awaken!
He Who Controls The Spice, Controls The Universe!

Offline bandit

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 25
    • DCEmu Reviews
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #28 on: March 13, 2007, 08:36:40 PM »
DCEmu Review has now reviewed the MK5.

http://reviews.dcemu.co.uk/review-neoflash-mk5-8gbit-giga-cart-1gb--55970.html

NeoFlash MK5 8Gbit GIGA Cart (1GB)
Manufacturer: NeoFlash
Site: Buy from www.IC2005.com
Price: $49.00

Overview : NeoFlash MK5 8Gbit GIGA is a slot 1 device (no passcard required). It does not use any external storage cards such as microSD. It holds up to 1GB of storage.

Features :
Support clean rom,not need any patch,just need drag and drop
Huge memory space,from 8Gbit upto 64Gbit
USB 2.0 high-speed data transfer
USB disk function, compatible with any operation system
Build in the last moonshell V1.5 and upgradable
Support homebrew
Build in SMS multi save function,and auto save
Menu upgradable,just need drag and drop the new core to MK5
Multi rom support,media play support
MK5 turbo engin, 100% full game running speed, without any delay
Build in passme function, can boot almost GBA flash cart perfectly

Quality/Usability : NeoFlash has entered the DS scene with their version of the Slot-1, MK5. Included with the package is Slot-1 MK5 8G DS Cartridge, Slot-2 GBA Linker, mini-CD and USB cable. Before you get ahead of yourself, this is not 8GB. This is 8Gbit which means 1GB of flash memory. There is also a 16Gbit as well (2GB - $59.00).

Out of the box, there were preloaded apps such as Moonshell and DSOrganize. The Slot-1 MK5 DS cartridge is the same as that of the real DS cartridge. It acts as a pass-me similar to that of the M3 Simply and R4DS. Unlike other Slot-1 cards, the MK5 uses flash memory to store all data rather than external cards such as microSD.

To transfer data, you will need to insert the MK5 GBA Linker. This is the cartridge that looks and is the same size as a GBA cartridge but has a USB port built-in. If you are to insert this into a DS Lite, the cartridge will stick out. Since the MK5 uses flash memory, the GBA Linker is used to communicate with your PC to transfer data. This does not store any data.

So how does this work? Insert your MK5 DS cartridge into Slot-1 of the DS and insert the GBA Linker into Slot-2 of the DS. Once the GBA Linker is inserted, connect the USB cable to the GBA Linker and PC. Turn on your DS and the PC will recognize the device as a removable storage. All you have to do now is just transfer your files. File transfer is pretty quick. When you have transfered all your files, turn off the DS. Since the GBA Linker only communicates with your PC, you will have to remove it. If you do not, you will not be able to access any of the MK5's feature and will be prompted with a message.

Upon turning on the DS (after you have removed the GBA Linker, you are brought to the DS menu screen. You will have to manually select the MK5. Once inside MK5, you can control the menu either with d-pad with A button to confirm or with the stylus. The menu screen itself isnt really attractive. With other Slot-1's you have some slight control over the look of the menu such as skinning. Unfortunately, you are unable to with the MK5. Although, you are able to customize Moonshell since they are based on BMP images and the fonts on MK5 via "global.ini".

The top screen shows the selected ROMs information such as ROM icon, filename, file size, last save date and page numbers (if you have more than 12 files).

The bottom screen shows the ROMs that you transfered onto the MK5. Each ROM has a 3D icon. As the current ROM is selected, the icon pulses to let you know which one is highlighted.

The MK5 worked perfectly with all the homebrew files I loaded onto the card. All homebrew booted quick and without a problem as it supported DLDI.

Booting of commercial ROMs were quick as well. The MK5 gets its save game size from a database. Luckily, the database is updated often. If for whatever reason the game save is not available, you can manually make one yourself by holding SELECT and pressing LEFT or RIGHT to select the save size. But this takes some trial and error if you dont know the size. You can see the compatibility and save game list here.

If you have a Slot-2 GBA Flash Cart, MK5 acts as a Pass-Me card which allows you to boot the GBA cart.

The MK5 also allows for future firmware upgrade. Upgrading the firmware is similar to that of loading a commercial ROM. It only takes a few seconds to upgrade the firmware.

A nice feature that NeoFlash included is the ability to format the MK5 incase it is corrupted. To format, just insert the MK5 and GBA Linker into the DS but dont insert the USB cable and dont turn on the system just yet. Hold down the L Trigger + R Trigger and the Down button then power on the DS. The MK5 logo will appear. While still holding the L Trigger + R Trigger and Down button, now press A + B button. The GBA Linker will now format the MK5. Since it is formatted, all data have been erased and you will need to transfer all data to the MK5 again.

Another unique feature that NeoFlash has released since the release of the MK5 is the ability to use the DS as a USB joypad and mouse. For more information, you can check out the official release.

Conclusion : Overall, the NeoFlash MK5 8Gbit GIGA Cart met my expectations if not more. The drawback of the MK5 is not being able to upgrade the memory since it is flash memory. But the price makes up for it considering the DS-X is 4Gbit and is twice the cost! For those first time users of Slot-1, you may not mind the menu screen but once you see or try others, you'll notice how plain the MK5 is.

« Last Edit: March 15, 2007, 06:50:31 AM by bandit »

Offline Zach

  • Newbie
  • *
  • Posts: 2
Re: the FREE mk5 8G for review! and the review collection
« Reply #29 on: March 17, 2007, 01:50:44 AM »
Hi, I will review it for www.talkvideogames.com PM me or email me at zmandryk@gmail.com for address to ship.