Have you ever been playing your Wii and have it go blank on you and felt completely lost with nowhere to turn to repair you Nintendo Wii? Are you like me and do not trust the UPS, Fed X, USPS shipping centers with your precious electronics nor do you trust the so called repair centers that employ not-so competent technicians? Don't feel like you are alone. There are plenty of us that have been in your situation and frantically working to come up with a viable solution to get your Wii repaired and running again without having to send it half way around the world and risk loss or damage. I came up with what I thought would be the best option, repairing my own Nintendo Wii. You heard me right, I said repairing my own Wii. From what I understood, there are a handful of things that go wrong with the Wii console and with a helpful troubleshooting guide it is fairly easy to repair your Wii. Especially if there is some sort of support system in place to ask your own specific questions if needed.
First off listen to my personal story. Nothing is worse than jamming out on your Wii with a couple of friends on a Saturday night and then your Wii goes dead or just freezes up. While some people like to go out on Saturday night I like to play games with my beloved Wii console.
So what did I do? I had my apartment to myself and plenty of time to play, all night if I wanted to. But I needed to repair my Wii and fast. It was malfunctioning and I knew I had seen information online about repairing a Wii at one time or another.
Needless to say, shipping the console to a repair shop wouldn't do the trick. That would take days before I can have my unit back. Not to mention, if the repair shop currently has numerous Wii consoles that need fixing too, getting my unit back will obviously take longer. On top of that, I have some, let us just say, unfortunate situations sending my Wii to be repaired.
The most memorable one is that it arrive working but has numerous scratches. Now I can't simply blame anyone as this could have happened at the repair shop or at transit or shipping. I'm a little OCD so I just gave away that unit.
Bottom line, this is my second unit and as much as possible I don't want anybody touching it but me - since I know this is just a simple problem that I can fix if I have an easy to follow Wii fix guide. I mean, I work at a bank and though I don't have much technical training, I am not totally technically impaired.
So I decided to follow my memory of seeing something on DIY Wii repair or a Wii fix it guide and did what I always do and Googled it. I found a few possible solutions to my dilemma. After doing about an hour of research and reading reviews and following links I came across a friend on a gaming forum that gave me his story about using The Wii Fix Guide to repair his Wii. He claimed that it only took a short time to follow the guide to troubleshoot his problems and then repair his Wii. To top it off there was free email support. Something that appears to be lacking in all other products or guides.
So I took his advice and followed the link to the website. The website was professionally designed and made several valid points about it being the best solution for those that are not afraid to spend a little time learning to perform their own Wii repair. Again, the email support was the final sales pitch that sold me completely. It was totally a no brainer.
So to make a long story short I repaired my Wii that night and was much happier and able to spend the rest of the evening playing my favorite gaming console.
First off listen to my personal story. Nothing is worse than jamming out on your Wii with a couple of friends on a Saturday night and then your Wii goes dead or just freezes up. While some people like to go out on Saturday night I like to play games with my beloved Wii console.
So what did I do? I had my apartment to myself and plenty of time to play, all night if I wanted to. But I needed to repair my Wii and fast. It was malfunctioning and I knew I had seen information online about repairing a Wii at one time or another.
Needless to say, shipping the console to a repair shop wouldn't do the trick. That would take days before I can have my unit back. Not to mention, if the repair shop currently has numerous Wii consoles that need fixing too, getting my unit back will obviously take longer. On top of that, I have some, let us just say, unfortunate situations sending my Wii to be repaired.
The most memorable one is that it arrive working but has numerous scratches. Now I can't simply blame anyone as this could have happened at the repair shop or at transit or shipping. I'm a little OCD so I just gave away that unit.
Bottom line, this is my second unit and as much as possible I don't want anybody touching it but me - since I know this is just a simple problem that I can fix if I have an easy to follow Wii fix guide. I mean, I work at a bank and though I don't have much technical training, I am not totally technically impaired.
So I decided to follow my memory of seeing something on DIY Wii repair or a Wii fix it guide and did what I always do and Googled it. I found a few possible solutions to my dilemma. After doing about an hour of research and reading reviews and following links I came across a friend on a gaming forum that gave me his story about using The Wii Fix Guide to repair his Wii. He claimed that it only took a short time to follow the guide to troubleshoot his problems and then repair his Wii. To top it off there was free email support. Something that appears to be lacking in all other products or guides.
So I took his advice and followed the link to the website. The website was professionally designed and made several valid points about it being the best solution for those that are not afraid to spend a little time learning to perform their own Wii repair. Again, the email support was the final sales pitch that sold me completely. It was totally a no brainer.
So to make a long story short I repaired my Wii that night and was much happier and able to spend the rest of the evening playing my favorite gaming console.
No comments:
Post a Comment