I found a statically linked binary of vice that works with LDK RetroFW. Just copy it to your uSD card and you can play MunchMan! Probably of no interest to anyone else, but the dingoo TI99/4A emulator will work, no porting needed. Most of the emulators are already included in RetroFW, but few of the games are. But I got digger working, so I'm mostly satisfied. Hell, I don't even know if this is the source from which the emulators included in "RetroFW" are built. It looks like many of these games/emulators are in varying states of disrepair, thanks to the shambolic mess that is RS-97 RetroGame don't expect to just type make and have them compile. You can find the source to lots of games and emulators here: I hoped it was just a matter of pointing CC to the crosscompiler, but lots of Makefiles are messed up. I cloned the (or do I mean a?) RetroFW buildroot on my Arch Linux system and compiled a few games not (yet?) included: digger (A mediocre DOS-era? version of Mr. I tried out super mario and zelda and they looked ok. I have not extensively tested SNES games.
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Still, at least using those batteries it’s easy to have a few backups, you could even charge the spares in the car if you want to.Įrr, I think pretty much all the software is homebrew? No worries about the battery, didn’t realise you’d only just got it. It’s the only way I can take most of my systems with me when the wife drags me kicking and screaming on holiday I always prefer the original devices, but a good handheld emulation device is an absolute necessity for me. There’s so much good homebrew around for practically every system, they pay for themselves as far as I’m concerned. Even without using them to protect your original games. I think flash carts/tape emulators/disk emulators are an essential these days anyway. Too damn expensive to replace if something goes wrong.īut I always organise into nice neat folders, so I can find things nice and easily. I don’t like using my originals, not when some of them are worth hundreds of pounds on their own. I’ve got various tape/disk emulation devices for all of my old computers too, well, I like to use those and flash carts whenever possible, so I have dozens. The emulator runs Fatal Labyrinth (Sega's version of Nethack) well, but I don't know what-if anything-constitutes a good Genesis game. Sonic and whack-whack-whack fighting games were never my thing. I also forgot to mention Picodrive (Genesis/MegaDrive) because I didn't like that system. (Over an hour into it, I still can't find the potty and my digi-whatsit beastie is leaving digiturds all over the town.) Are there any fun games on PS1? What the PS1 could have done with Pokemon. Had to use real PS1 bios as the HLE bios lacks something needed to create save game. I played a little Digimon World just to test the PS1 emulator and it seems to work well enough. I'll see if it changes color, dims, or goes out when the battery gets low.
(Assuming, of course, the battery indicator icon in RetroFW really works!) There's also a green LED on the back. Seems good so far in that I haven't noticed it going down much in an hour or two. The battery says 1000mah and it looks like a super-common battery I've seen in a lot of Nokia phones from the 00s. I didn't comment on LDK battery life because I just got it yesterday. The only downside is finding anyting, now that 80s computers can have more storage than I could have possibly imagined back then. Cheap microcontrollers (uIEC/SD) and FPGAs (Chameleon) enabling SD-card floppy disk drive replacements have kept me using C128, C64, TI99/4A, and Tandy Color Computer (similar to Tano? Dragon? in Wales) computers long after floppy drives became musical instruments. I wonder how long it will be until 3rd and 4th parties start selling trashy knock-offs of LDK Retrogame. Hopefully people will concentrate on console- and handheld- emulators and not waste too much effort on emulating horrible old 80s computers like TRS-80, TI99/4A, etc. I also didn't bother with TV-out, because I like handhelds, not TV-game style consoles. There are a lot of strange emulators, but I didn't test every one because I don't see the point in using retro computer emulators (BBC micro, spectrum, c64, atari800) on a handheld with NO KEYBOARD. Neogeo pocket color (emulator is called race-od) was the only disappointing emulator because it can't save state (or save at all). GBA/SNES/NES/GB(C)/Lynx/Atari2600/Colecovision emulation are pretty fast, look good, and have save states using the latest "RetroFW." Contrast most "Retro Game this-and-that" handhelds where emulators just barely work and the battery lasts an hour. I got one from retromimi and it is really the first RS-97 / GB(A) knock-off device to impress me.