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It's possible, but it's probably not something that you can do yourself. I'm assuming here as well. Assuming that the 2nd box just wrote zeroes or random trash data to the drive, it can be recovered, but if it's just save data...you have to consider the cost of specialist data retrieval over just playing the games again... I mean its expensive
I would generally agree with Get Some! I'm thinking the same thing. Specialized data recovery again is just going to recover files, not reconstruct the drive to some previous workable state.
But I would maybe look at asking the question on some specialized Xbox360/360 modding communities. They're bound to have more practical expertise about your situation than a random PC hardware forum. My philosophy is usually to find the community that specializes in your issue rather than random forums where you might get lucky that someone happens to have the exact specialized expertise you need.
So if they were to say you were up a creek without a paddle that would be more definitive in my mind. Or they might have better advice about the situation. And I think your best bet to not make the situation work is talk to people who are more qualified than people who are largely going to making guesses.
TestDisk & PhotoRec 7.2-WIP, Data Recovery
https://www.cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Download
Highly professional, smart and small tool easy to use. 100% Freeware & Open Source.
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ReadMe
https://www.cgsecurity.org/testdisk_doc/
-> 7. Repairing filesystem
-> 8. Recovering deleted files using TestDisk
-> 9. Recovering deleted partition using TestDisk
Good Luck!
You’ll end up with the files, not the directories. Photorec just puts the files in folders as it pieces them back together so its seems unorganised and difficult to find a specific file or type.
Here’s a bash script that puts each file type in its own folder… useful if your looking for game saves, for example.
Just set the file type, original (the path to recovered files) and new (path to where you want the sorted files to go).
The last two commands deletes a source file after it’s been copied and any empty source directories. You may want to omit those. I chose to delete a copied source so I know every filetype has been found and moved.
filetype=png
&& original=data
&& new=flat
&& mkdir -p /$new/$filetype/
&& find /$original -name "*.$filetype" -type f -exec cp -v {} /$new/$filetype \;
&& sudo find /$original -name "*.$filetype" -type f -exec rm -v {} \;
&& find /$original -empty -type d -delete
"A: add partition, L: Load backup, Enter: to continue"
pressing enter gives me a message that says "No partition found or selected for recovery", has it simply not found anything or should i add partition? i dont want to accidentally do something that overwrites or breaks something, i dont really know what this option does exactly
i did this on the usb as thats the easiest
btw it also gave me all that in 4 different folders which i thought was kinda weird
edit: actually there is some stuff that looks different, only a few but some are like .gz or .tff, maybe they are save files idk, but still i think it should be way more than a few hundred mb