Installing the GC Loader in the Nintendo GameCube
The GC Loader is an optical drive emulator (ODE) for the Nintendo GameCube. It replaces the optical drive with an SD card reader and works together with Swiss — the most widely used homebrew loader for the GameCube. No more fragile mini-DVDs, no laser issues, the full library on one SD card.
What you need {#what-you-need}
- GC Loader PNP (the most popular version — plugs directly onto the drive connector)
- SD card (minimum 32GB, FAT32 formatted)
- GameBits 4.5mm screwdriver — for the outer GameCube screws
- Torx T8 screwdriver — for internal screws
- Swiss homebrew loader (free to download)
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GC Loader PNP vs other versions
The GC Loader PNP (Plug and Play) connects directly to the IDE connector of the optical drive — no soldering required. This is the recommended version for most people.
Step 1 — Open the GameCube
- Remove the 4 GameBits screws on the bottom (the large ones with the special head)
- Lift the top of the housing off
- Remove the fan cover (held by clips)
- Remove the fan (disconnect the connector)
- Remove the 3 Torx T8 screws holding the optical drive
Step 2 — Remove the optical drive
- Disconnect the IDE flat cable from the optical drive (press the lock and slide out)
- Disconnect the power cable
- Lift the optical drive out of the GameCube
Keep the drive safe — it’s a valuable spare part.
Step 3 — Install the GC Loader
- Connect the IDE flat cable to the GC Loader
- Connect the power cable
- Mount the GC Loader on the mounting points with the included screws
- Insert an SD card with Swiss onto the GC Loader
Step 4 — Put Swiss on the SD card
- Download the latest version of Swiss from the official GitHub page
- Format the SD card as FAT32
- Copy
swiss.dolto the root of the SD card - Copy your game ISOs into a folder (e.g.
/games/) — use.isofiles
Note: SD card format
The GC Loader works best with FAT32-formatted SD cards. For cards larger than 32GB you'll need an additional tool for FAT32 formatting (Windows defaults to exFAT for large cards). Use guiformat.exe or a similar tool for larger cards.
Step 5 — Test and close up
- Don’t fully close the GameCube before testing
- Connect power and turn on the GameCube
- Swiss loads automatically and displays your games
- Select a game and test that it starts correctly
- If everything works: reattach the fan, cover and screws
Done
Your GameCube now loads games directly from an SD card via Swiss. Load times are comparable to or faster than the original optical drive. Via Swiss you can also adjust settings, enable cheats and use diagnostic tools.
Questions or doubts? You’re not the first. We’re happy to help you through it.