Even it by adding a "0" in front of it ("0176BB").Īfter you find the value that you are looking for, you need to do the same thing with the new value that you want to replace it with. So new values need to be reversed before replacing the old values.įor example, say that a file uses a reversed byte order, and you want to find the hex value "176BB" (95,931 in decimal).ġ. The byte order of a file is sometimes reversed from what you might expect. The hex editor "HxD" shows the column numbers above each column. on the left, and columns with "00"-"0F" to the right. In this case, the beginning of a save file. If I am correct, the offset is the distance from a specified starting point.
- For converting the xv2savdec for the Switch, he/she converted the decryption function while I only converted the encryption function from his/her workįalo was also the one who found out that the Switch version does not contain an MD5 header which made things much simpler.Eternity - Huge thanks goes to Eternity for his/her initial work on a DBXV2 save file decryptor/encryptor ( xv2savdec) for PS4/XBone/PC.sav.dec, and it will create an encrypted "_enc.dat" file. dat file into the program, and it will create a ".sav.dec" file with the decrypted content. 1.10.02, I am unsure if it will work with lower versions.Īs always, make backups of your save before trying this tool. Warning: This tool was only tested on DBXV2 ver. I have made a simple one through the link down below.
The decrypted save file cannot be opened with save editors that are meant for PC/XBone/PS4 versions. This is a tool to decrypt and re-encrypt your DBXV2 save file (savefile1.dat).