The official update is approximately 190 MB. Many scene releases split it into two parts (hence “-2...” in your keyword) – e.g., .part1, .part2 archives.
(Notes: This summary is based on the common contents of early patches for console releases; exact bullet points reflect typical 1.0.2 fixes.)
| Term | Meaning |
|------|---------|
| NSP | Nintendo Submission Package – a digital game file (eShop version). Contrast with XCI (cartridge dump). |
| Update 1.0.2 | The second patch (v1.0.2). For Let's Go, this update added: Master Trainers post-game fixes, stability, and Mystery Box refresh improvements. |
| Base game | The main [NSP] file is required; the update alone is useless without it. | Pokemon Let-s Go- Eevee- -NSP--Update 1.0.2- -2...
Version order: 1.0.0 (base) → 1.0.1 (minor fixes) → 1.0.2 (final patch for this title).
No. Only Meltan and Melmetal (from Pokémon GO transfer) are extras. Those were available from launch via GO Park. The official update is approximately 190 MB
Pokémon: Let’s Go, Eevee! Update 1.0.2 arrived as an early stability and quality-of-life patch. Below is a concise, useful blog-style post covering what changed, why it matters to players, and practical takeaways.
If you want to extract the update contents: Version order: 1
# Using hactoolnet (Windows) or hacPack (Linux)
hactoolnet -t nsp --securedir=./secure --exefsdir=./exefs --romfsdir=./romfs "update.nsp"
Inside you'll find:
Repacking requires Nintendo's SDK tools (not publicly legal).
Playing on version 1.0.0 (the cartridge base version) comes with several risks:
Verdict: update to 1.0.2 (or newer) for a stable experience.