Have you ever encountered a damaged Nintendo Wii gaming system and you do not know where to turn to repair your Wii? Don't trust those individuals that do the delivery and shipping or the repair centers as you know deep down inside that most of them are simply self-taught technicians with no formal training? Well you are not alone. I have been there frantically thinking of what to do to get my Wii up and running again without having to send it out to untrustworthy repair centers or having to pack the heck out of the box so the brutal shipping services don?t do more damage to it or worse yet, lose it somewhere between New York and Seattle. I came up with my own solution, I did my own Wii repair. You notice I said my own repair? Yes, your hearing is good, Nintendo Wii repair is not all that hard and in fact fairly easy and fast with a nice Wii Fix Guide and email support to answer questions that might come up while you have your Wii disassembled.
Let me first share my story with you. Nothing ruins my Thursday game night greater than a broken Wii console. Some people go out to clubs and drinking, I stay in on Thursday night every week and have Wii game night. Nothing seems worse than working a long stressful week and come game night your Wii console goes caput!
So what to do? Wife and kids will be staying at their grandparents so I have the whole house for myself. This is the perfect opportunity to go all out and play all day right. But I have to do something about my malfunctioning Wii.
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.
Probably the most memorable one is that it arrived working but has an ungodly number of scratches that were not there before. Now who do I blame this on? The shipping or freight company for not caring for my Wii in transit or do I blame the repair facility and some guy named Bubba, working on my Wii with his dirty fingers. I'm just a little too obsessive compulsive so I just gave it away.
You get the picture. I want to keep my second Wii scratch and blemish free and I do not feel like risking it again. I am far from having money to throw at buying another Wii.
I proceeded to follow my thoughts online and see what I could find out about the DIY Wii repair or Wii Fix Guide that I had previously heard about in one of the gaming forums. After spending some time with Google I found quite a bit of information on the Wii Fix Guide. I do not buy into anything without doing serious product reviews so I spent about an hour on research and concluded that the Wii Fix Guide was the answer to my problems. A fellow gamer in one of the forums made it a serious recommendation and gave me his story on how it helped repair his Wii. The icing on the cake was free email support! This is nowhere included in any other Wii guide or forum.
So I visited the site. Usually, I have doubts about this but after seeing the website and that it is professionally designed (shady ones usually have generic web page construction) my confidence is gradually building up. What sealed the deal is that they offer email support to teach how to fix Wii problems. I always preferred email support and being able to ask specific questions. It always makes things much easier.
So I personally repaired my Wii (I knew it was just a simple matter) and nothing is much sweeter than playing an all night gaming session.
Let me first share my story with you. Nothing ruins my Thursday game night greater than a broken Wii console. Some people go out to clubs and drinking, I stay in on Thursday night every week and have Wii game night. Nothing seems worse than working a long stressful week and come game night your Wii console goes caput!
So what to do? Wife and kids will be staying at their grandparents so I have the whole house for myself. This is the perfect opportunity to go all out and play all day right. But I have to do something about my malfunctioning Wii.
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.
Probably the most memorable one is that it arrived working but has an ungodly number of scratches that were not there before. Now who do I blame this on? The shipping or freight company for not caring for my Wii in transit or do I blame the repair facility and some guy named Bubba, working on my Wii with his dirty fingers. I'm just a little too obsessive compulsive so I just gave it away.
You get the picture. I want to keep my second Wii scratch and blemish free and I do not feel like risking it again. I am far from having money to throw at buying another Wii.
I proceeded to follow my thoughts online and see what I could find out about the DIY Wii repair or Wii Fix Guide that I had previously heard about in one of the gaming forums. After spending some time with Google I found quite a bit of information on the Wii Fix Guide. I do not buy into anything without doing serious product reviews so I spent about an hour on research and concluded that the Wii Fix Guide was the answer to my problems. A fellow gamer in one of the forums made it a serious recommendation and gave me his story on how it helped repair his Wii. The icing on the cake was free email support! This is nowhere included in any other Wii guide or forum.
So I visited the site. Usually, I have doubts about this but after seeing the website and that it is professionally designed (shady ones usually have generic web page construction) my confidence is gradually building up. What sealed the deal is that they offer email support to teach how to fix Wii problems. I always preferred email support and being able to ask specific questions. It always makes things much easier.
So I personally repaired my Wii (I knew it was just a simple matter) and nothing is much sweeter than playing an all night gaming session.
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