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I remember we tried that on Wii sports resort but the toothpaste wasn't white so I'm sure we ruined that gameWell, use a standard white toothpaste.
It can repair light scratches, but that looks pretty banged up.
And yes, I'm serious.... Google it. Toothpaste can polish scratches out enough for it to read anyway.
Well... light scratch's anyhow
That kind of toothpaste is for discs with cavitiesI remember we tried that on Wii sports resort but the toothpaste wasn't white so I'm sure we ruined that game
Yeah, it has to be just plain white toothpaste, no gels or the foaming kind.I remember we tried that on Wii sports resort but the toothpaste wasn't white so I'm sure we ruined that game
I can confirm that it works, that remedy saved half of my anime dvd collection.Yeah, it has to be just plain white toothpaste, no gels or the foaming kind.
And you have to buff it out and rinse it off, to. I know it works, as I have repaired music CDs like this.
Probably nothing you have on hand, kid-o.Thank you all for the ideas guys but my toothpaste isn’t white, I thought it was but it’s blue, pretty sure my parents use white toothpaste but I don’t feel like walking through their room and explaining why I’m using toothpaste to fix my copy of Wii Sports so are there any ways that don’t require toothpaste?
You to kid-oAlso have a wonderful day or night!
Or just try the toothpaste trick in the morning.wait a second, I have an idea, on the weekend I’m going to my dads parents house and they live close to a retro toy shop I go to (it’s where I got my n64) and I’m going to see if they do repairs on disc, so I just gotta wait