🎮 Level Up Your Wii Experience!
The HyperkinHD Cable for Wii is designed to enhance your gaming experience by providing compatibility with HDTVs, delivering 480p resolution for select titles, and featuring a generous 7 ft. length for flexible gameplay. Enjoy clear picture quality and crisp audio, but remember to use an OEM power supply for optimal performance.
T**R
Plug and play, works great
This is the HDMI adapter to get for hooking up the Wii to modern TVs. There are cheaper options out there, but the Wii only outputs a 480i/480p signal and so the ones that claim to "upscale" to 720p or 1080p aren't doing the Wii's picture any favors. This one leaves it alone at 480p, so the same as if you used a component cable (the Red/Green/Blue/White/Red one). This results in a sharper image than if you use the Yellow/White/Red cable and doesn't add any unnecessary processing to the image. You simply plug it in and go. You might have to go into the Wii settings and change the image from 480i to 480p, though.The resulting picture is noticeably sharper than using the stock R/W/Y cable and looks good on modern TV's. Obviously this machine is a few generations old so the quality won't rival the Switch or even the WiiU, but it looks good and many Wii games hold up well today. So I'm very happy with this cable and it's simplicity, it feels well made and is a great option for hooking a Wii up to HDMI.
A**R
Simply works. Clean 480p output.
I needed to find a product that would give a clean 480p output in preparation for a new retro upscaler I ordered called the mClassic. You'll see several small white brick looking adapters for the Wii on Amazon. Some output an upscaled 1080p image, but I wanted just 480p which is the highest natively supported by the Wii anyway. This left me with 2 options the Hyperkin HD cable and the KCool variety of small white brick adapters. The KCool did indeed display a 480p image at half the price of the Hyperkin but with a lot of noise displaying as a diagonal red lines across the image (painfully noticeable when flat colors were displayed on screen, and against the horizontal lines the Wii uses at various places in its user interface).The Hyperkin however had no such issue. The result is a clean image that looks just as good as my official Wii component cables with no distracting visual noise.For whatever reason you may need an HDMI output from the Wii (with cost in mind and without mods that require disassembling the system), this is the product you want. Easily worth the extra cost. Remember, this will not "clean up" the image. I thought it may be a tad sharper or "crisper" overall but in my limited testing playing the same small section of a game with official component cables and then the Hyperkin, they looked virtually identical.
T**K
Great modern solution for wii
Works great, picture is great, especially with the upscaler!
I**O
Absolutely NOT recommended
This adapter takes component video (YPbPr) output by the Wii, and converts it to HDMI. It works at 480i, 480p, 576i resolutions. Didn't test it on a Wii U at higher resolutions.The analog signal does not get upscaled in any way. This is exactly what I wanted. Other than that I liked the idea of having a long, black video cable which would look pretty nice and less messy when connected to a black Wii. The cable looks quite sturdy overall.However, while I thought to have finally found the perfect fit, I was quite disappointed by the resulting picture. I compared it to the picture output via two separate component to hdmi adapters connected using a dedicated Wii component video cable.These are the two:https://www.amazon.co.uk/KanaaN-Component-YPbPr-Converter-Adapter/dp/B00423GLWWhttps://www.amazon.com/Portta-SPETRH-Component-Converter-Uncompressed/dp/B00LPHJE5EThe first analog to digital converter (KanaaN) is the very best one I have ever owned. Not the best I would have wanted, just the cheapest I could buy with a really decent picture quality. It works beautifully up to 1080i over component video on my Wii U.The second one (Portta), is quite smaller and consumes a bit less power, but the picture output is a bit "squashed" or letterboxed. Infact it adds two black bars of 8-10 pixel on the top and the bottom. To remove those by the view, I need to activate a zoomed view on my screen. This adds lag, and needs adjustments which I am frankly quite annoyed to still have to follow through on a 2017 screen.Now this dedicated adapter for the Wii from Hyperkin, it outputs the exact same squashed picture as the Portta adapter above. They both are the very smallest analog to digital video converters I have ever seen, and I wouldn't be surprised to find the exact same IC inside them.It doesn't end here. The picture when using a Wii component cable and a Portta adapter, yes it is squashed, but it is clean. Instead the Hyperkin cable introduces artifacts: white dots appeared on certain parts of the screen. These were expecially visible on dark areas.Having read that quite a few Wii users had experienced such kind of behaviour, and when it happened it was most often caused by GPU issues (which needed a full console replacement). So at first I thought that I was looking at the final stage of my beloved Wii's life. But then I calmed down and just unplugged the Hyperkin, reconnected a Wii component cable to the external HDMI converter, and got again a completely clean picture.Now if you have ever owned a cheap 3rd party video cable for the Wii, you might have noticed that it can introduce such white dots artifacts, if not just any kind of statics/noise (other than color shifting, ghosting, and whatnot). I own a PAL Wii, and when using RGB SCART cables, in order to have a clean picture I have had to buy the official Nintendo SCART cable. Even Nitho's "Pro" SCART cable failed miserably, measuring its CVBS pin (aka SYNC signal on Wii) running at over 2V..!In conclusion, this converter from Hyperkin not only uses a subpar analog to digital video converter IC, it also uses low quality (or just unshielded, I guess) cable interconnects. At this price point ($22.90 on Dec'17) it felt like a genuine rip-off to me, expecially when there are tons of Wii2HDMI converters out there for sale for less 1/3 of the price. On these cheaper alternatives the Wii AV plug is soldered directly to the converter board, and such solution reduces by 90% the chances to introduce visual artifacts.
D**E
Beyond expectations
I have a Sony bravia TV, No issues getting it set up. The image is alittle fuzzy but that's because we aren't used to seeing much of 480p any more but changing the settings to 480p from 480i on the WII it self seemed to help crisp up the image quality and there seeems to be no lag, no tearing and no image crashing. The Audio is perfect! With electronics and cables you really do get what you pay for as long as your TV or Monitor allows for 480p image! Worth the price and everything 🥰
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago