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- #Do i need to format drive with usbextreme to use opl ps2#
OPL, OPL 1.1, Open PS2 Loader, Poops and Boobies, anything. For “Name”, choose it and name it however you want.
Once you’re at the new screen, it shows you two main sections.
If it does not mention an app, we’ll add one by choosing this first blank slot. If it does, press right on the D-Pad until you see a blank slot. (APP) means that it says the name of an app.
The section option down on this new screen is “Configure Item 1: (APP)”.
Now, mid-screen you’ll see “Configure OSDSYS options…” choose it. Choose whichever one your PS2 memory card that FMCB is loading from is slotted into. If you’re running “Free MCBoot Configurator”, choose “Load CNF from MC0” or “Load CNF from MC1”. First thing’s first, if you’re running “Free HDBoot Configurator”, choose “Load CNF from hdd0” towards the top. If you’re in Japan, press O, if you’re anywhere else, press X. When it loads it will give you a choice of which button you want to want for OK and which for CANCEL. If you have either a “Free MCBoot Configurator” or “Free HDBoot Configurator”, then you’re in luck! Start whichever you have. If you’ve ever used an FMCB installer in the past, even if OPL didn’t auto show up, you have a method to make it do so. If it is on the PS2 menu when you boot up FMCB, then you’re done, enjoy! No? Then read on. Go ahead and power cycle the PS2, it could be that you have a configuration already for OPL. It will show you a loading window while it does the transfer. Now that you’re inside the “APPS” folder, press R1 again and choose “Paste”. If you’d like to automate it, keep reading. Again, you can either leave this ELF in the “APPS” folder and load it manually from it or you can automate it more. There will be a folder called “APPS”, if not, press R1 and choose “New Dir” and make an “APPS” folder. Press Triangle to back out to the main File Browser where you can see all destinations and go up to choose your PS2 memory card. Select it and it will tell you up top that it is now cut or copied. Using your D-Pad, go to the “Copy” or “Cut” option, either works. This brings up a sub-menu on the right side of the screen. If your buttons are still at the default configuration, you’ll navigate to the OPL.ELF file and select it by pressing the circle button. Go down to the “mass” option and enter that, it will show you the contents of your USB thumb drive. Now, you can either leave this USB drive in the PS2 all of the time and simply load the ELF manually from it or you can automate it a bit more. Press “O” on your controller if you are not already in the File Browser portion. Start that app, likely a “uLaunchELF” fork of some kind. Everyone has a way of loading ELF files, so should you. After that, copy OPL.ELF to the root of any Fat32 formatted USB thumb drive. First, rename it a very simple name, I recommend OPL.ELF. Now, you’ll find that you’ve got a file called OPNPS2LD-v.1.1.0.ELF. If not, this website can extract files for you and let you download the individual files from “ OPNPS2LD-v1.1.0.7z” You’ll have to have 7zip installed to extract the files. To do a basic install via USB, head to the github download page and scroll to the downloads at the bottom. If that sounds too complicated, do the following. The easiest thing to do is to update your FMCB with an installer that gets you the newest FMCB and add replace whatever version of OPL they have with 1.1.0, then run the installer and it does the work for you. HDD OSD users can use OPL with OPL Launcher. internal HDD users now can change partition for storing settings. (experimental) i.LINK/IEEE1394/FireWire support. NBD server for transferring files over network. “gcc 11 toolchain used for both EE and IOP. OPL is developed continuously – anyone can contribute improvements to the project due to its open-source nature.” Changelog: It’s now the most compatible homebrew loader. USB devices and SMB shares support USBExtreme and \*.ISO formats while PS2 HDD supports HDLoader format. It supports three categories of devices: USB mass storage devices, SMB shares and the PlayStation 2 HDD unit. “Open PS2 Loader (OPL) is a 100% Open source game and application loader for the PS2 and PS3 units. Here, lemme show you (there’s some big improvements for internal HDD users)! Well now’s the time to get updated, cause there’s a whole new OPL. OR…or…maybe you download the nightly releases, but know how unstable they could be.
Haven’t cracked out your trusty PS2 in a while? Heck, maybe you had the release of the stable 1.0.0 release of the Open PS2 Loader months and months and months ago.