Unfixed-info.bin 🎯 Best
On Linux/macOS (or WSL on Windows):
The next time you see unfixed-info.bin , don’t panic. Ask yourself three questions: Where is it? When was it created? What process owns it? The answers will tell you whether you’re looking at a harmless patch remnant, a failed ROM hack, or—rarely—a piece of malware wearing a disguise. unfixed-info.bin
Any discrepancies that cannot be resolved—or any chunks of data that were due to hash mismatches, permission errors, or previous modifications—are written to a temporary holding file. That file is named unfixed-info.bin . On Linux/macOS (or WSL on Windows): The next
, such as the Amiibo's nickname, the owner's Mii, and game-specific progress (e.g., a leveled-up Wolf Link in Breath of the Wild or a custom fighter in Super Smash Bros. : It is a tiny binary file, typically exactly 2. The Twin Key: locked-secret.bin To fully use Amiibo tools, unfixed-info.bin must be paired with locked-secret.bin Locked-Secret : This is the tag master key What process owns it