Each update required hunting again. The scene groups—SUXXORS, VENOM, Blawar—released incremental NSP updates, but installing them out of order could corrupt saves. Kaito learned the golden rule: He found a v1.0.16 patched NSP that merged the update into the base. He replaced the old base with the new merged one, reinstalled DLC, and finally—stable. Chapter 5: The DLC That Wouldn’t Unlock One mystery remained: the “Legendary Costumes” pack (Samurai Warriors 5 skins for Nobunaga and Mitsuhide) showed as “purchased” in the in-game shop but remained locked. Kaito dug into the DLC NSP’s contents using hactool . He discovered that some DLC required a ticket file—a cert and tik that verified entitlement. His DLC pack had only the nca files, no tickets.
Kaito typed slowly: “Look for the Gaia’s Sandals repack. v1.0.16 merged. Install with Awoo. Don’t forget sigpatches. And if you enjoy it, buy a t-shirt or something.” Warriors Orochi 4 Ultimate Switch NSP UPDATE DLC
He also discovered that the upgrade wasn’t just a flag. The game checked for a specific title ID ( 0100E2900B6A6000 for US, 0100E2B00D48A000 for JP/EU). Installing the wrong region’s update would break DLC compatibility. He triple-checked: US base, US update, US DLC. Epilogue: A Stable Slice of Chaos Six months later, Kaito had logged 200 hours. He cleared Infinity Mode’s 100 floors with Hades, maxed out every character’s proficiency, and even used Edizon to unlock the “Play 1,000 battles” achievement because life is short. His Switch’s emuMMC was a time capsule of Warriors Orochi 4 Ultimate —the definitive, complete, offline-forever version. Each update required hunting again
But then came the announcement: Ultimate . Not DLC. Not a patch. A full new release. More characters (Gaia, Hades, Yang Jian), a new Infinity Mode, and a storyline that wrapped up the loose threads. Kaito sighed, looked at his wallet, and then at his modded Switch. He knew what he had to do. Kaito wasn’t a pirate by nature—he owned over 60 physical Switch games. But re-buying a game he already owned, just for an “upgrade” that cost nearly full price? That stung. So he turned to the deep forums: r/SwitchPirates, GBAtemp, a Discord server named “Musou Preservation Society.” He replaced the old base with the new
At first, all he found were broken links—MEGA folders with decryption keys long expired, Google Drive links that had been DMCA’d mid-download, and torrents with one seeder who went offline at 87%. But then, a post from a user named Gaia_s_Sandals caught his eye: “Base NSP + v1.0.13 Update + All DLC (including pre-order costumes and legendary weapons). Repack with working unlocker.”