Copy Video games to Difficult Drive & Make Backup Copies Fast
Xbox 360 video games are expensive and they can get damaged a number of different ways. You can easily scratch them or the Xbox 360 console can damage these games.
So how do you copy games to the difficult drive? Well, there are two ways you can go about doing this. You can copy it directly to your Xbox 360 HDD difficult drive or you can copy it to a separate tricky drive using an FTP client.
To copy Xbox 360 games to your really hard drive you are going to need to download a software known as the DVD2 Xbox software onto your Xbox 360 console. It should appear in the Xbox dashboard under applications once you have installed it.
You will then need to open the software and put the game disk you wish to copy in the console. You will then need to go to settings and enable both the f and g drives.
Once you have opened up these 2 drives you should see a message that will ask you what drives do you want to choose. You will have the option to choose either the E, F, or G drives and the games subdirectory to copy the games to.
Once you have chosen the drive the software will begin copying your games to the really hard drive. You will get a confirmation screen once the copying process has been completed.
TO copy your Xbox games to the tough drive using a FTP client you will need to connect your gaming console to the PC with an ethernet cable. Now create an FTP window on the computer so you can copy the games through the FTP on the PC.
You will then need to convert the game into a ISO file. You will need a ISO software to do so. Once done, burn the ISO file onto a black Xbox Games HDD.
This is how you copy video games to the Xbox 360 tough drive. However there is a much easier way to copy your games and make back ups. Using a special game copier software you’ll be able to copy video games quickly in 5 steps.
Different Types of Xbox 360
It was publicly revealed (though it was available in stores far earlier) by Microsoft’s president of Entertainment Devices division Robbie Bach to the Financial Times on October 18, 2007, and officially announced on October 22, 2007. According to Electronics Philippines centers and retailers, this version of Xbox 360 includes:
1 wireless controller
Composite AV cable
HDMI 1.2 output
1 internal 256 MB memory chip (units released prior to fall 2008 included a 256 MB memory unit)
5 Xbox Live Arcade titles: Boom Boom Rocket, Feeding Frenzy, Luxor 2, Pac-Man Championship Edition, and Uno on a single disk, which also includes a “Welcome Video” and several game trailers/demos.
Xbox 360 Pro
Sometimes referred to as Premium and packaged as simply Xbox 360 with the subheading “Go Pro”, this version of Xbox 360 includes all the features of the Xbox 360 Arcade and includes a hybrid composite and component cable with optional optical out instead of a composite cable. This model also includes a detachable 60 GB Tough Disk Drive (previously a 20 GB HDD) to store downloaded content, provide compatibility with original Xbox games, and store game data.