In my case, named my folder and ISO file as “1”. As what everybody advise, keep the name of the folder and the ISO short as possible. Regarding the location of my patcher I just put it in C under a folder. Okay, for some reason the dragging approach doesn’t work on me, instead I follow the Command prompt approach. You can just install 7-zip on your own then copy the similar files from the Program files of 7-zips. – If you’re in 32-bit OS, replace the 7-zip files used in the patcher (you can see that at the RESOURCES folder) with a 32-bit version of 7-zips. NET Framework installed (ver 4 at the moment) – Make sure you have an updated Java installed (Java 7 at the moment) ![]() Not sure how I did it since I keep testing several approach… but let me share how I did it… This patcher will not work with prepatched versions of the game that contain an eboot.old file or prometheus.prx file. The final patched ISO will be named exactly the same as your original one, and the original one will have a. Normal procedure on my machine is that the patcher opens JPCSP, appears to do nothing for about 5 minutes, then closes JPCSP and moves on to step 2, whereupon each additional step goes by smoothly, if slowly. The two “File Not Found” messages that display in the command prompt window are normal, ignore them. NET framework and Java installed on your computer as well as at least 4 GB of open harddrive space. However, it patches just fine if I create a new folder on my desktop and ends up creating a 1.64GB ISO. ![]() If I attempt to use the same patcher from the download, but attempt to patch with the files on the drive in a long directory, it produces the ~670MB ISO. This might be a problem where the directories get too long for the patcher to handle. Try moving all the patch files to a lower directory and renaming your ISO something short. ![]() I believe I have found a solution to that particular problem. One of the common problems that most people seem to be getting is that when the patcher completes, the resulting file is much smaller than the original ISO.
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