Multibeast 3101 Snow Leopard _hot_ ⟶

Sandy Bridge (Intel 2000 series) CPUs and AMD processors—MultiBeast 3.10.1 does not support them properly.

is a post-installation tool designed for enthusiasts building a Hackintosh —a non-Apple PC running macOS. Specifically, MultiBeast 3.1.0 (released around 2010-2011) was a critical version for users running Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard . Purpose and Functionality multibeast 3101 snow leopard

| Component | Ideal Choice | Why it works | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 / Core i7-920 (Bloomfield) | SSE4.1 support; Native speedstep | | Motherboard | Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3R or GA-P55-UD3R | Rock-solid ACPI; Well-documented DSDTs | | Graphics | NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GT / GTX 260 (Fermi not supported fully) | Fully QE/CI support via built-in drivers | | Audio | Realtek ALC888 or ALC889 | MultiBeast includes patched AppleHDA.kext | | Ethernet | Realtek RTL8111D | Stable BCM5722D or RealtekR1000 kexts included | | RAM | 4GB DDR2/DDR3 | Snow Leopard 32-bit kernel limit is 32GB, but 4GB is sweet spot | Sandy Bridge (Intel 2000 series) CPUs and AMD

Remove your USB installer. Your system should now boot directly into Snow Leopard with full audio, network, and proper resolution. Purpose and Functionality | Component | Ideal Choice

Do not install FakeSMC from this version if you are using a newer hardware monitor plugin—stick with the built-in v2.5.

Because Snow Leopard is over a decade old, tonymacx86’s official downloads page no longer hosts v3.10.1. You will need to search reputable Hackintosh archive communities or check your old backup drives.

A "catch-all" solution for systems without a custom DSDT. It installs a set of essential kexts and configurations to make most Core/Core 2/i-series Intel systems bootable. Typical Workflow (The "iBoot + MultiBeast" Method)