If you have another television, attempt to use it to set up the Wii U.Once you are done, reconnect the Wii U with your HDMI cable and change the TV input settings to HDMI.Once a minute has passed, ensure the TV is set to the correct input channel. It can take up to a minute for the Wii U console to detect that a Wii AV Cable/Wii Component Video Cable is connected.You will need to ensure the TV is set to the correct input settings if you switch cables. Try a Wii AV Cable or a Wii Component Video Cable.If you do not immediately see this screen, wait an additional fifteen seconds. After a few seconds, you should see a screen prompting you to pair the Wii U GamePad on the television. Wait fifteen seconds, and then locate the correct input channel for your connection.Power off the Wii U console and television.Ensure you are turning the TV and Wii U on in the correct order.I immediately disabled Wiiconnect24/standby on my own Wii after arriving home, as I don't want to chance it happening to me as well.Īnyone think it wise to invest in a cooler of sorts for my Wii? I really don't want to deal with customer service. What position did you people with the same problem put your Wii's in? :winky: Now, he had Wiiconnect24/standby enabled and even worse, he had his Wii on its side, without using the stand below it, basically blocking up one fan exhaust completely. We checked once more with Zelda and I told him his graphics chipset was probably fried. When we started playing Rayman, however, it became extremely noticable. I noticed some black spots in the background, but didn't think much of it (thought it was his connection to his TV). So yesterday evening, I was over at a friend's house playing some Wii Sports. I had heard about this overheating business before, but only on the internet though, hadn't seen it in 'real' life yet. Next troubleshooting step? Suggest moving the in-game camera. You can't "move your camera around" interferance. Proper troubleshooting technique says "do not test for something that has already been shown/proven." If there's corruption in game and not just "on" the game's output, there's no way it's coming from the cables. There are many links in the chain of video and the Wii itself is only one of them. I would also take some time and try another device with component output on your television. Get some decent cables, if that fixes your problem great! If not, return the cables and get Nintendo support on the phone. Since your cables are the cheap variety most likely the problem lies with them. Since the signal is an analog transmission, interference caused by other devices or just poor shielding on the cables themselves can lead to problems during transmission. Second it's important to realize that component connections are just that, a video signal broken down into components. First things first, buy or borrow some component cables that you know will work without problems. If only one part of a certain game is buggy, there's pretty much no way it's the cables.ĭon't get hasty. Defective cables usually produce a consistent problem, no matter what you're looking at. Sorry to break it to ya man, but this makes me almost 100% sure it's your Wii. I went into a game and on one screen where there is a bright blue thing on the ground the blue was breaking up and not really holding it's shape.
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