When discussing the golden era of arcade sports games, Sega’s Virtua Tennis 3 stands on the podium. Released in arcades in 2006 and ported to the Xbox 360 in 2007, it represented a quantum leap in graphical fidelity and physics over its predecessors. However, for the dedicated modding community, the stock experience is only the beginning. Enter the world of JTag and RGH (Reset Glitch Hack) modified Xbox 360 consoles.
For the uninitiated, (for early dashboards) and RGH (for later dashboards) are hardware modifications that bypass Microsoft’s security checks, allowing users to run unsigned code, homebrew applications, backed-up games from an HDD, and—most importantly—custom modifications.
Whether you are chasing a career mode Grand Slam or just want to smash a perfect cross-court winner with a modded 2009 Federer skin, the combination of is a match made in console modding heaven. Disclaimer: Modding your Xbox 360 and downloading game backups may violate Microsoft’s Terms of Service. This article is for educational and archival preservation purposes only. Always own the original game disc.
When discussing the golden era of arcade sports games, Sega’s Virtua Tennis 3 stands on the podium. Released in arcades in 2006 and ported to the Xbox 360 in 2007, it represented a quantum leap in graphical fidelity and physics over its predecessors. However, for the dedicated modding community, the stock experience is only the beginning. Enter the world of JTag and RGH (Reset Glitch Hack) modified Xbox 360 consoles.
For the uninitiated, (for early dashboards) and RGH (for later dashboards) are hardware modifications that bypass Microsoft’s security checks, allowing users to run unsigned code, homebrew applications, backed-up games from an HDD, and—most importantly—custom modifications. Virtua Tennis 3 -Jtag RGH-
Whether you are chasing a career mode Grand Slam or just want to smash a perfect cross-court winner with a modded 2009 Federer skin, the combination of is a match made in console modding heaven. Disclaimer: Modding your Xbox 360 and downloading game backups may violate Microsoft’s Terms of Service. This article is for educational and archival preservation purposes only. Always own the original game disc. When discussing the golden era of arcade sports