This is the most dangerous part. Many websites offer "free downloads" bundled with adware, trojans, or keyloggers. Here are the safest sources:
Even with the correct Firstchip MPTool download, you may encounter issues:
| Error Message | Meaning | Solution |
|---------------|---------|----------|
| "Device not found" | Driver not installed or controller not supported. | Reinstall MPTool driver. Check ChipGenius again – you may have a different controller. |
| "Bad block too many" | NAND flash is heavily degraded. | Run "Erase good block" option. If still failing, the drive is unrecoverable. |
| "Download ISP fail" | Corrupted firmware or incorrect tool version. | Try a slightly newer/older MPTool version. Look for "Force Download" option. |
| "Write CID error" | Security lock on the controller. | Some newer Firstchip controllers (FC3379) have write-once CID zones. Not fixable. |
| "Setting password incorrect" | Common passwords: 320, 123456, 000000, 888888. | Search online for “
Another reputable Russian site. Go to the "Firmware" section and search for "Firstchip". They provide clean, unmodified archives with checksums.
Firstchip Mptool (Mass Production Tool) is a specialized Windows software used to repair and reprogram USB flash drives that utilize controller chips manufactured by FirstChip (FirstChip Microelectronics). This is the most dangerous part
Unlike standard formatting tools found in Windows, an MP Tool works at the firmware level. It can perform a "low-level format," which essentially resets the flash memory controller. This is often the only solution for drives that:
Click the "Scan" or "Refresh" button within the software. The tool should detect your FirstChip USB drive in one of the available ports. Another reputable Russian site
(Assumes MPTool GUI; some versions are command-line.)
Example clean filename:
Firstchip_MPTool_FC1179_20191218.rar
After downloading, always scan the file with Windows Defender or VirusTotal. Some MPTools trigger false positives because they modify low-level USB drivers – but executable-packed malware is common. If multiple engines flag it as a generic trojan, find another source.