2 votes
TRIM.NDS File - What is a .trim.nds file and how do I open it?
Learn about .TRIM.NDS files and view a list of programs that open them.
Languages
Overview
What is a TRIM.NDS file? A TRIM.NDS file is a Nintendo DS video game ROM created by GodMode9 or another ROM-dumping utility. It contains the same data as the Nintendo DS game cartridge from which the file was created. TRIM.NDS files are the same as .NDS files, except that they have had unnecessary filler data removed.
More Information When a gamer uses GodMode9 or another Nintendo DS ROM-dumping utility to create a game ROM, the utility typically creates an NDS file. The NDS file's size is always the same as its associated game cartridge's total storage space, even if the game the NDS file contains did not use all that storage space. For example, say a game was 700 MB in size and stored on a cartridge with 1 GB of storage. When GodMode9 creates an NDS file for that game, the file will be 1 GB in size, not 700 MB. The extra 300 MB of data the NDS file contains is dummy data, which is not needed to play the game in an emulator. Gamers who want to trim this dummy data from their NDS files, so their NDS files take up less space, can do so using either GodMode9 or an NDS file trimming utility. The trimmed NDS ROMs these utilities produce are often saved with the .trim.nds extension. NOTE: In some rare cases, trimming an NDS file might accidentally delete relevant game data stored in that file, rendering it unusable. Therefore, you should always keep a copy of your trimmed NDS files until you have checked that your TRIM.NDS file functions correctly.
Document Icon
Breadcrumbs
Previous / Next
In-Depth
.TRIM.NDS File Extension
Trimmed Nintendo DS Game ROM
| Developer | N/A |
| Popularity |
3.5 | 2 Votes |
What is a TRIM.NDS file?
A TRIM.NDS file is a Nintendo DS video game ROM created by GodMode9 or another ROM-dumping utility. It contains the same data as the Nintendo DS game cartridge from which the file was created. TRIM.NDS files are the same as .NDS files, except that they have had unnecessary filler data removed.
More Information
When a gamer uses GodMode9 or another Nintendo DS ROM-dumping utility to create a game ROM, the utility typically creates an NDS file. The NDS file's size is always the same as its associated game cartridge's total storage space, even if the game the NDS file contains did not use all that storage space.
For example, say a game was 700 MB in size and stored on a cartridge with 1 GB of storage. When GodMode9 creates an NDS file for that game, the file will be 1 GB in size, not 700 MB. The extra 300 MB of data the NDS file contains is dummy data, which is not needed to play the game in an emulator.
Gamers who want to trim this dummy data from their NDS files, so their NDS files take up less space, can do so using either GodMode9 or an NDS file trimming utility. The trimmed NDS ROMs these utilities produce are often saved with the .trim.nds extension.
NOTE: In some rare cases, trimming an NDS file might accidentally delete relevant game data stored in that file, rendering it unusable. Therefore, you should always keep a copy of your trimmed NDS files until you have checked that your TRIM.NDS file functions correctly.
How to open a TRIM.NDS file
You can open a TRIM.NDS file and play the Nintendo DS video game it contains in DeSmuMe (Windows, Mac), OpenEMU (Mac), RetroArch (cross-platform), Delta (iOS), and other Nintendo DS emulators.
Open over 400 file formats with File Viewer Plus . Free Download
Programs that open TRIM.NDS files
Sort
Pricing
Program Name
Platform
Reset
X
Windows
DeSmuMe
Free
RetroArch
Free
Mac
DeSmuMe
Free
OpenEmu
Free
RetroArch
Free
Linux
DeSmuMe
Free
RetroArch
Free
iOS
Delta Emulator
Free
RetroArch
Free
Android
RetroArch
Free
Category: Game Files
Updated: October 7, 2021