A menuhax-based setup has everything on the SD card, so deleting everything from the SD card will effectively result in starting fresh. However, menuhax-based setups use an EmuNAND that stays on your SD card as a separate partition, so we'll need to do a bit of extra work to get rid of it.
You'll need your operating system's equivalent to administrator access to do this, so public or organization-managed computers probably won't work. If you don't have access to a computer where you can get administrator access, you can install custom firmware, back up your SD card files, use GodMode9 to format your SD card, then restore your SD card backup. |
Section I: Repartitioning SD card
Windows
- Press WIN+R to open the Run prompt
- Type
diskmgmt.msc
, then press ENTER - Figure out which drive is your 3DS SD card, then right click a partition and click "Delete Volume"
- Repeat this for every partition on the SD card until you see one giant block that says "Unallocated"
- Right click on the unallocated block and click "New simple volume"
- Click through the prompts until you are prompted to select a filesystem, then select "FAT32"
- If your SD card is 64GB or larger, select "exFAT", then follow Formatting an SD card/Windows
macOS
Follow the usual steps to format an SD card on macOS.
Linux
WIP
Section II: Installing custom firmware
Now that your EmuNAND has been deleted, you can install custom firmware as you would on an unmodified console. Your SysNAND was probably on version 9.2.0, so that means following Installing boot9strap (Soundhax).
Your setup has been upgraded! |