Any advice from anybody who made it work? Where can I see some kind of log to see what is happenning? Thanks. Now I can see the Nintendo DS with the roms on Emulationstation menues but it didn't worked for me. I added a retroarch.cfg file copied from other emulator directory and added on it: input_remapping_directory = "/opt/retropie/configs/nds/"Īnd also added the emulators.cfg file with this content: desmume="/usr/games/desmume-cli %ROM%" opt/retropie/supplementary/runcommand/runcommand.sh 0 _SYS_ nds %ROM%Īnd I did the trick suggested there to use desmume-cli instead of desmume to avoid the need to have a X system. I already created the nds folder on config and roms directory, I put nds roms there, I added to /etc/emulationstation/es_systems.cfg the code: I installed "desmume" using sudo apt-get install desmume. I read here you can set up desmume using cli. Secondly, you need a X server and Desktop Environment to run it. (I don't know because it didn't worked for me yet). The first is, the Pi 3 does not have enough processing power to have a good experience running nds games.People say that to run that kind of roms (.nds files) there are 2 problems with the Pi: I read here there is a nds emulator for Retropie called "desmume". The cartridge houses a Raspberry Pi 3 mini-computer running the RetroPie emulator and streaming both video and input through the GBAs multiplayer-oriented Link Port. I'm trying to run roms for the Nintendo DS, so far unsuccessfully. I have a Pi 3 working fine with Retropie and mame, snes, gba roms e.t.c.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |