These are just a couple little java executables I made in my free-time, one of them converts Pokemon Emerald .srm saves (produced in some emulators) into .sav saves, used in others. While the other converts .sav back into .srm.
License: GNU General Public License v3.0
Java 100.00%
pokemon-emerald-save-converter's Introduction
==============
= Disclaimer =
==============
These tools were only designed and tested for US Pokemon Emerald save file conversions!
Should you bork your saves from other pokemon games or from Emerald of a different region,
then you have no one to blame but yourself!
=========
= Usage =
=========
-->IMPORTANT<--
Your save files MUST be named "Pokemon Emerald.sav" or "Pokemon Emerald.srm" when placed
into the specified folders (case sensitive!), otherwise the tools will not see them and
obviously will not convert them.
-->IMPORTANT<--
Your directory should look like this: Directory/SavToSrm/
SrmToSav/
LICENSE.txt
README.txt
SavToSrm.jar
SrmToSav.jar
-If you are converting a .sav save, place it into the "SavToSrm" folder, and
-launch the SavToSrm.jar. Your converted save should appear in the same directory
-as the jar files.
-If you are converting a .srm save, place it into the "SrmToSav" folder, and
-launch the SrmToSav.jar. Your converted save should appear in the same directory
-as the jar files.
=========
= Other =
=========
Source Code: https://github.com/16BitWonder/Pokemon-Emerald-Save-Converter
If you paid money for this... Why? (Also go get your money back)
These tools are provided as is, and I am in no way liable if you somehow bork your saves
or something else with them.
That being said, the only way you could bork your save would be if you put a .srm into the
SavToSrm folder and tried to convert it into .srm again. Or if you put a .sav into the
SrmToSav folder and tried to convert it into .sav again.
Looks like the two executable .jar files are identical--verified using BeyondCompare. I assume this was just a mistake when publishing the release. Executing either script results in creating a .sav file from a .srm file in the srm folder.