Pokemon Let-s Go Pikachu Xci Rom -base V1.0.2... May 2026

Leo’s excitement grew—until he hit the practical wall.

“You don’t need one. The game runs perfectly on Ryujinx if you dump your own cartridge. Borrow my Switch and my copy of Let’s Go Pikachu for an afternoon. You’ll learn how to dump it legally.” Pokemon Let-s Go Pikachu XCI ROM -Base v1.0.2...

But Leo didn’t own a Switch. He had a decent PC and an Android phone. A quick Google search led him to a forum post with a title glowing like a lure: “Pokémon Let’s Go Pikachu XCI ROM – Base v1.0.2 (Untouched, working on Yuzu/Ryujinx).” Leo’s excitement grew—until he hit the practical wall

“But I don’t have a Switch,” Leo said. Borrow my Switch and my copy of Let’s

They spent two hours together. Using a homebrewed Switch (which Maria had only for emulation of her own purchased games), they dumped the cartridge into an XCI file, extracted the title keys, and transferred it to Leo’s PC. The same v1.0.2 base file—but this time, legally sourced from a copy he had physical access to.

First, the download: free links were throttled to 200 KB/s, promising a 20-hour wait. Premium links cost $15, which made him pause—why pay pirates when the real game was $60? Second, his antivirus flagged the archive as containing a trojan. He ignored it once, and his browser started redirecting to scam pages. A system restore later, he was back to square one.

Leo’s excitement grew—until he hit the practical wall.

“You don’t need one. The game runs perfectly on Ryujinx if you dump your own cartridge. Borrow my Switch and my copy of Let’s Go Pikachu for an afternoon. You’ll learn how to dump it legally.”

But Leo didn’t own a Switch. He had a decent PC and an Android phone. A quick Google search led him to a forum post with a title glowing like a lure: “Pokémon Let’s Go Pikachu XCI ROM – Base v1.0.2 (Untouched, working on Yuzu/Ryujinx).”

“But I don’t have a Switch,” Leo said.

They spent two hours together. Using a homebrewed Switch (which Maria had only for emulation of her own purchased games), they dumped the cartridge into an XCI file, extracted the title keys, and transferred it to Leo’s PC. The same v1.0.2 base file—but this time, legally sourced from a copy he had physical access to.

First, the download: free links were throttled to 200 KB/s, promising a 20-hour wait. Premium links cost $15, which made him pause—why pay pirates when the real game was $60? Second, his antivirus flagged the archive as containing a trojan. He ignored it once, and his browser started redirecting to scam pages. A system restore later, he was back to square one.