Because Yuzu has no online functionality, a 100% save file is arguably the best way to enjoy the game's massive roster without the archaic "challenger approaching" mechanic every 10 minutes.
Happy smashing, emulator fam. Have a specific version you need a save for? Drop the update number (e.g., v15.0.0) in the comments.
Let’s be honest: Super Smash Bros. Ultimate is a monumental game. With over 80 fighters, nearly 30 stages, over 1,000 Spirits, and the grueling World of Light campaign, achieving "100%" completion is not a weekend project—it’s a pilgrimage. For most Switch owners, that grind is part of the charm. But for emulator users on PC (specifically Yuzu or Ryujinx), the calculus changes.
You are a competitive player who only cares about training mode or local versus, or you are restoring a lost save.
Maybe you’ve switched PCs, lost your save data due to a corrupted NAND, or simply don’t want to spend 40 hours unlocking characters you’ve already unlocked five times before. Enter the .
Because Yuzu has no online functionality, a 100% save file is arguably the best way to enjoy the game's massive roster without the archaic "challenger approaching" mechanic every 10 minutes.
Happy smashing, emulator fam. Have a specific version you need a save for? Drop the update number (e.g., v15.0.0) in the comments.
Let’s be honest: Super Smash Bros. Ultimate is a monumental game. With over 80 fighters, nearly 30 stages, over 1,000 Spirits, and the grueling World of Light campaign, achieving "100%" completion is not a weekend project—it’s a pilgrimage. For most Switch owners, that grind is part of the charm. But for emulator users on PC (specifically Yuzu or Ryujinx), the calculus changes.
You are a competitive player who only cares about training mode or local versus, or you are restoring a lost save.
Maybe you’ve switched PCs, lost your save data due to a corrupted NAND, or simply don’t want to spend 40 hours unlocking characters you’ve already unlocked five times before. Enter the .