On your computer, create the following folder path on your SD card:
sd:/install/
Take the downloaded "High Quality" WUP folder (e.g., Call of Duty Black Ops 2 [ALZE01]) and copy the entire contents into the sd:/install/ folder. Do not change any file names. The folder should contain files like title.tmd, title.tik, 00000000.app, 00000001.app, etc.
Call of Duty: Black Ops II represents a unique entry in the Wii U library. Released as a launch window title, it remains one of the most technically impressive games on the system, offering full off-screen play on the GamePad and distinct dual-screen mechanics. For modern enthusiasts looking to preserve their library or play without physical discs, the WUP installable format provides a high-quality, seamless experience that integrates directly into the Wii U system menu.
This documentation details the attributes of the "High Quality" WUP version, the technical requirements for installation, and the advantages of this format over standard loading methods.
Unlike the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions, the Wii U port supports native 720p (upscaled to 1080p via the console) and runs at a surprisingly stable 60 frames per second. The true killer feature, however, is Off-TV Play. With a high-quality WUP install, you can play the entire campaign, all Zombies maps, and multiplayer bot matches directly on the GamePad screen. This is the only way to play Black Ops 2 portably without a gaming laptop or PlayStation Portal.
This WUP installable high-quality dump of Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 for Wii U is the definitive preservation copy. It includes all content, runs smoothly, respects the original GamePad features, and is ready for both offline and online play.
💾 Preserve this version – no other console offers full dual-screen Call of Duty with zombies on the go (without a cloud stream).
Last updated: 2026 – Compatible with Aroma, Tiramisu, and CBHC environments.
Reviewing Call of Duty: Black Ops II for the Go to product viewer dialog for this item.
through the lens of a "WUP installable" version (Wii U Package format used with WUP Installer GX2) highlights a unique console port that remains the most content-rich shooter on the platform. Installation Experience (WUP/Wii U USB Helper)
For many users, finding a high-quality WUP file is essential because Black Ops II was primarily a physical release, making it difficult to find on the official eShop before it closed.
Source Quality: High-quality dumps are typically around 18.7 GB to 20 GB.
Compatibility: To install this version, you must have a modded Wii U with Custom Firmware (CFW). call of duty black ops 2 wii u wup installable high quality
Common Issues: Users often report errors like "invalid title.tmd" if the dump is missing critical tickets or metadata. Verified versions from the Internet Archive are frequently cited as reliable sources for these files. Performance & Visuals
Resolution: The game runs at a native 880x720 with 2x MSAA, which is technically sharper than the PS3 version and comparable to the Xbox 360.
Frame Rate: While it targets 60 FPS, it frequently dips into the 30s and 40s during intense action or when using the GamePad as a second screen.
Graphics: Reviewers from Digital Trends noted that while foliage can look degraded, character faces and lighting effects often exceed the other console versions. The "Wii U Only" Features Call of Duty: Black Ops II Review - Nintendo World Report
Title: The Last Disk
Logline: In a forgotten corner of the internet, a former modder races against the shutdown of Nintendo’s Wii U servers to preserve a lost, high-quality build of Call of Duty: Black Ops 2—the one that actually worked.
The Story
Marco’s basement smelled of dust and old solder. He preferred it that way. It smelled like preservation.
The CRT monitor flickered, casting a green glow across a row of external hard drives labeled “WUP - INSTALLABLE.” For the past three years, he had been the ghost in the machine, the archivist of a console everyone else had buried: the Wii U.
Tonight was different. His Discord server, WUP-Haven, was on fire.
@Marco_Mods: The NUS servers are going dark at midnight. Get the BO2 WUP build while you can.
Black Ops 2 on Wii U was a myth. Most ports were jagged, laggy messes—frame rates dropping to slideshows during a Hunter Killer drone strike. But there was a specific build, version v1.04 (EUR/USA), that ran at a buttery 60fps. It was the holy grail of Wii U homebrew. The problem? It had never been properly dumped. On your computer, create the following folder path
Marco slid a fresh 64GB SD card into his PC. He had the decryption keys. He had the ticket. All he needed was the raw data from Nintendo’s forgotten Update Server.
Click. Whir.
Python scripts scrolled by. He watched the packets fly out into the void, pinging Nintendo’s CDN. Most files returned 404 errors. But then, a hit.
BLACK_OPS_2_Pack_TAC.7z – 2.1 GB
His heart stopped. That was the "Texture and Audio Compression" pack. The one that smoothed out the TranZit loading screens. The one that made the Wii U GamePad actually useful as a second screen without dropping frames.
He whispered to the humming hard drives. “Got you.”
But as the download bar hit 78%, the connection stuttered. A red error: SSL_HANDSHAKE_FAILURE. Nintendo had just flipped the switch on the legacy authentication servers. The keys had expired.
Marco didn’t panic. He reached under his desk and pulled out a dusty Wii U console, still on firmware 5.5.2. He had pre-installed a custom Network Spoofer six months ago. He hotwired the LAN adapter, pointed his host file to a local cache, and restarted the handshake.
Boom. The download resumed.
At 99%, his cat knocked over a can of Mountain Dew. The liquid raced toward the surge protector. Marco lunged, catching the can mid-roll. One drop hit the USB hub. The drives flickered. The screen froze.
For three seconds, there was silence.
Then, the terminal read:
[WUP] INSTALLER PACKAGE COMPLETE. SHA-256: 9A3F… VALID.
Marco leaned back. He formatted the SD card, dropped the four .app files and the .tik into the install folder, and walked over to his legacy Wii U.
He pressed the Homebrew Launcher icon. Then WUP Installer GX2.
Select target: NAND. Select title: Call of Duty - Black Ops II [WUP-P-BLKE] Quality: HIGH (720p / 60fps)
He pressed Install.
The progress bar moved slowly. 10%... 50%... 100%.
The Wii U chimed. The icon appeared on the GamePad—a tired soldier’s face, sharper than any memory had a right to be.
Marco launched the game. The Treyarch logo hit without a single frame drop. The main menu loaded in four seconds. He joined a local match on Nuketown 2025. The GamePad showed the full tactical map, latency zero.
He smiled. The servers were dead. The store was closed. But right here, on this dusty basement TV, Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 ran like it was 2013.
He uploaded the WUP pack to a private Torrent tracker. Seed. Forever.
The End
| Issue | Solution |
|-------|----------|
| "Corrupt data" on install | Redump WUP – ensure SD card isn’t fake/fragmented |
| Game loads to black screen | Update to v64 (included in HQ pack) or reinstall via NUSspli |
| DLC not showing | Use WUP Installer G2X (not old version) and ensure tickets are valid |
| Online not working | Install latest update + use Pretendo or bypass DNS | 💾 Preserve this version – no other console