Gen 3 Pokemon Save Editor For Mac
This is a project to make a collection of a few tools for Gen 3 Hackers. So far, I made these tools: Moves Editor. Save to Dropbox; G3T - GEN 3 TOOLS ( Windows / Android). The Moves Editor is adding '00' bytes at the end of my ROM. The number of '00' bytes being added depends on how much you edit the moves though. Generation 3 Edit. Advance Map - A very handy tool that is used for mapping. Want to make a completely new game? Or just add a new dungeon? This is what you need. It can also edit wild Pokemon that spawn, trainer sprites, and scripted events (provided you link it with a script editor.).
| Pokémon save files
 Mew Green 5kai or Tehe set up.sav  Mew Red 8F set up.sav  Mew Yellow ws m set up.sav  Pocket Monsters Ao.sav  Pocket Monsters Crystal (based on DJSonics save).sav  Pocket Monsters Geum (Korea).sav  Pocket Monsters Midori v1.0.sav  Pocket Monsters Pikachu v1.0.sav  Pocket Monsters Ruby (from CyberBlast).sav  Pokemon Blue.sav  Pokemon Crystal v1.0.sav  Pokemon Emerald.sav  Pokemon Esmeralda (Spanish Emerald) for Pomeg glitch.sav  Pokemon FireRed (altered save from GameFAQs).sav  Pokemon Gold Epsilon memory editor.sav  Pokemon Gold.sav  Pokemon Red Eevee Factory.sav  Pokemon Red long range Trainers left.sav  Pokemon Red.sav  Pokemon Ruby.sav  Pokemon Silver.sav  Pokemon Trading Card Game (EU).sav  Pokemon Yellow Eevee Factory.sav  Pokemon Yellow Fairy.sav  Pokemon Yellow Game Corner glitch set up.sav  Pokemon Yellow MASTER BAL Rhydon.sav  Pokemon Yellow Mario Mushroom Kingdom .sav  Pokemon Yellow Shrek.sav  Pokemon Yellow long range trainers left.sav  Pokemon Yellow offgao memory editor.sav  Pokemon Yellow save abuse glitch ready.sav  Pokemon Yellow unused tune use ws m.sav  Pokemon Yellow.sav  Pokémon Red offgao memory editor.sav  Save files Pokemon GB GBA (collection of all files above).zip  Virus Save - Ho-oh - 1.04 (by pokeglitch86).SAV  Virus Save - Pikablu Virus - 1.03 (by pokeglitch86) .SAV  all glitch trainers yellow.sav  change player character red.sav  crystal 5q.sav  gangnam mon.sav  gold 5q.sav  living glitchdex yellow.sav  pokemon gold tech support guy.sav  pokered glitch field moves.sav  pokered jfb1337 ram writer.sav  pokered living glitchdex.sav  pokeyellow glitch field moves.sav  sav zzazz memory editor red.sav  steal foes pokemon.sav  yellow mario.sav  | 
SanDisk Extreme Pro Portable SSD
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- ProsIP55-rated for shock-, dust-, and water-resistance. Rubberized aluminum case is easy to grip. Excellent read/write speeds. Includes USB-A and USB-C cables and five-year warranty.
- ConsA little expensive. Exposed USB port, so not that rugged. No activity light. Cables are a touch short.
- Bottom LineFrom its silicone-wrapped aluminum case to its blazing data transfer speeds, SanDisk's Extreme Pro Portable SSD has a lot to offer, but it's neither as rugged nor as well-designed as some competitors.
There are plenty of good portable solid-state drives to consider, so your choice comes down to a mix of affordability, speed, convenience, and value-added extras. Seiko matsuda best ballad rare. SanDisk's Extreme Pro Portable SSD ($229.99 for 1TB) does a great job in some of these areas—it's very fast and it comes with two USB Type-C cables, one with a Type-C and one with a Type-A end for your computer, rather than an easy-to-lose USB-C-to-A adapter. But its cost of 23 cents per gigabyte, while not outrageous, is somewhat steep, and it's not as rugged as some rivals. It'll satisfy many shoppers, but it falls short of an Editors' Choice.
The Hole Problem
The Extreme Pro's convenience is slightly diminished by its form factor: Mainly to provide room for a corner loop to which one might attach a carabiner or other clip, the case is larger than it has to be. Not that it's huge, mind you; we're talking about 1TB of storage in a 6.1-ounce package measuring 0.4 by 4.3 by 2.3 inches. Still, it's a bit bulky compared to other external SSDs.
In reality, attaching a carabiner and keys would be a mistake—not only would it add bulk that might be uncomfortable in a pocket, but the keys would almost certainly mar or gouge the silicone rubber that covers the case. The loop looks cool, but is of limited utility. It's best and most practically used if you wanted the drive clipped to your belt or pack for easy access.
Another gripe is the lack of an activity light. Some manufacturers provide them, but many don't, probably to save weight and cost. But as nitpicky as it sounds, an activity light is nice to have; how else are you to know that data is actually being read or written, since an SSD makes no noise or vibration as a hard drive does? A tiny LED would be helpful, especially since you're paying a bit more for this drive than for some others. (If you can live with a slower interface and without the word 'Pro,' SanDisk's own SATA- rather than NVMe-based 1TB Extreme Portable SSD is about 17 cents per gigabyte.)
On the plus side, SanDisk does comes through with a couple of very useful value-adds. As mentioned, the company includes two USB cables, one USB-C-to-USB-A and one USB-C-to-USB-C. (The device's interface is USB 3.1 Gen 2; the unit is backward-compatible with older USB specs, but if you use it with, say, a USB 3.0 connection, your peak read and write speeds will be affected.)
In addition, the drive comes with SanDisk's proprietary SecureAccess data encryption utility preinstalled. (The drive ships formatted for Windows; Mac users will want to reformat the drive and download the Mac version of the utility from the link provided in a PDF.) The software creates a password-protected 'vault' (OK, it's a folder) on your SSD. Pro tip: Do not lose the password. If you do, SanDisk can't help you.
Finally, the Extreme Pro carries a five-year warranty, while most rivals are limited to two or three years. That's a nice touch.
It's Fast, But Is It Tough Enough?
As a sealed unit containing no moving parts, any SSD is inherently somewhat rugged. The SanDisk Extreme Pro carries an Ingress Protection rating of IP55, so it goes beyond that to be reasonably shock-, dust-, and water-resistant. But while the SanDisk should be able to withstand a six-foot drop or occasional splash of water, you cannot immerse the unit, nor can you expose it to beach sand or dust storms. If you drop it into the surf, the bathtub, or your backyard koi pond, it's probably gone.
This is actually pretty obvious given that there is no cover for the drive's USB port, which remains exposed at all times. If you need a closer-to-indestructible pocket SSD, our current Editors' Choice is the ADATA SE800.
On a more positive note, the Extreme Pro Portable SS aced our benchmark tests. This thing promises transfer speeds in the 1,000MBps range, and it delivered in style. As noted earlier, the internals on this drive, like on the ADATA, Crucial, and CalDigit models charted below, are PCI Express-based and support NVMe; compare the numbers that these drives deliver with what we saw from the SATA-based HyperX Savage EXO. These newer-generation PCI Express-based drives will need a USB 3.1 Gen 2-compliant USB port to hit their peak speeds, but it's worth opting for one of these newer models if you'll do lots of large sustained transfers.
BlackMagic 3.1 Disk Speed Test
The BlackMagic drive-testing tool, which is available only for Macintosh computers, was created by an Australian producer of video software and hardware and is often used by videographers to determine how a drive will perform when working with large video files. The Extreme Pro tore through this test, scoring at the top of the heap. The Crucial X8 had a trivially faster read speed, but the SanDisk had a ditto write speed. It's a wash.
In the end, most all the tested SSDs, except for the SATA-based HyperX Savage EXO, scored very well in this benchmark.
PCMag Drag-and-Drop Test
In this real-world test, we hold a stopwatch in one hand while copying a 1.2GB test folder containing several different file types from our testbed system to the SSD with the other. This offers a good look at the sort of transfer speeds one might expect to find in the wild. The SanDisk Extreme Pro finished the operation in two seconds, tying the ADATA SE800 and taking only half the time it took the HyperX.
PCMark 8
The PCMark 8 storage subtest mimics typical productivity workloads such as word processing and videoconferencing. The Crucial X8 edged the SanDisk Extreme Pro by a negligible amount.
This test also demonstrates that for workaday tasks like these, the raw speed of an SSD (PCI Express or SATA) doesn't matter all that much.
Crystal DiskMark
Crystal DiskMark's sequential read/write tests measure the performance of drives as they read and write large blocks of contiguous data. Here, the Extreme Pro was the champion on the strength of its write speeds, reading data at 957MBps and writing at 970MBps.
Once again, the HyperX Savage EXO brought up the rear, reading and writing at a bit better than half the speed of the SanDisk SSD.
Impressive But Imperfect
SanDisk's Extreme Pro Portable SSD is an attractive drive that would be perfect for videographers, photographers, and anyone else who creates large amounts of data and needs to store and transfer it quickly and efficiently. The drive is good-looking and swift, and it comes with useful cables and helpful utilities, not to mention the longest warranty you're likely to find on a product of its kind.
Is it the ultimate external SSD, though? Not quite. First, it's a bit expensive in terms of cost per gigabyte. Second, the lack of an activity light detracts from the drive's attractiveness, and its merely partial ruggedization (including a permanently exposed USB port) sees it topped by some like-priced or cheaper competitors. It's a very good SSD, but just shy of an excellent one.
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SanDisk Extreme Pro Portable SSD
Bottom Line: From its silicone-wrapped aluminum case to its blazing data transfer speeds, SanDisk's Extreme Pro Portable SSD has a lot to offer, but it's neither as rugged nor as well-designed as some competitors.