Once you've done all this close the open window (via clicking close and not the x in the top right) and then click play on the newly created link. And of course replace all (.) with the user your pc is running under found in the 3rd line of the added games properties. Replace the SGB bios with whatever your file is named (i recommend sgb.sfc). Replace the rom with the rom of your choice (i recommend to keep the name small for space reasons. "C:\Users\(.)\Desktop\RetroArch\retroarch.exe" -L "C:\Users\(.)\Desktop\RetroArch\libretro\bsnes_balanced_libretro.dll" "C:\Users\(.)\Desktop\RetroArch\system\(insert name of sgb bios.sfc here)" -g "C:\Users\(.)\Desktop\Emulation\Gameboy\(insert name of rom.gb here)"Īll listed directories should match the exact names from a freshly extracted megapack of themaister's retroarch main page. Next right click the created link and select properties. click add a non steam game and browse to the retroarch.exe file found in your newly created folder on your desktop and add it. If all files are placed as stated open up steam and go to your library and scroll to the bottom of your list. These roms must NOT be zipped.Ĭ:\Users\(.)\Desktop\RetroArch\ (in this zip you will have a folder labelled system. This is just like any other rom image but is of the SGB base cart.įor ease of setting this up this is how i have my directories set:Ĭ:\Users\(.)\Desktop\Emulation\Gameboy (Place SGB compatible roms here. You will need to acquire a Super Gameboy Bios (version 1, 2, or super gameboy 2). I use steam's non steam game add support to set this up. Retroarch is currently unable to load SGB + gb rom via the current gui setup alone. The biggest hurdle was learning via trial and error that you can only get sgb emulation to work via a command line interface. but sadly I'm more into playing games than fiddling with config files so I don't think I would ever get that to work.ģ60 controller is still light years ahead of using a keyboard though, which is my experience with emulators before this.Ĭlick to expand.Sorry for the late reply. Pushing a button to switch between PS3 and 360 controller, and/or having a GPIO card thingy for using actual SNES / Megadrive controller and a Tac-2 joystick, would be better. Only downside I've noticed is that using a 360 controller to play SNES, PS1 and especially C64 games kind of leaves a bad taste in my mouth. I'm actually incredibly impressed about this piece of software, and as I said earlier I've been very much against emulators up until now.Īnd it's even possible to run PS1 games on it, maybe I could finally find a purpose for my old NTSC PS1 collection that has been collecting dust because of a broken PS1 and region lock on PS3 Phat. I've been playing quite a bit on a Raspberry Pi Retroarch setup with wireless 360 controller lately and I can definitely feel an added amount of lag, but I'm already used to it from playing two generations of console gaming on a LCD/LED TV so the upside of having a tiny box playing my favorite retro classics that Nintendo stubbornly refuse to upload to VC store won me over. Isn't it impossible to get emulators to compare to an old school retro setup if you're picky about latency? TV latency + HDMI latency + emulator latency + wireless controller latency
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