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    Is RPi3 able to handle these?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    rpi3genesissnes
    14 Posts 9 Posters 7.5k Views
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    • mediamogulM
      mediamogul Global Moderator @sad_muso
      last edited by mediamogul

      @sad_muso

      All of those run to your standards on the Pi3.

      Edit: Site caching problem. I thought this had yet to be answered.

      RetroPie v4.5 • RPi3 Model B • 5.1V 2.5A PSU • 16GB SanDisk microSD • 512GB External Drive

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • sad_musoS
        sad_muso
        last edited by

        Thanks all. I just tried Yoshi's Island on a Model B Pi1 and it was just about playable on that which surprised me. Better invest in an Pi3! :)

        Pi 4B 4GB
        PSU: LABISTS 5.1V 3A
        SD: SanDisk Extreme 32 GB for OS
        USB: 2.0 - Wired keyboard / Plugable Bluetooth 4.0 adapter, 3.0 - Crucial MX300 275GB SSD in Novatech caddy for ROMS
        Controllers: 8bitdo SN30 Pro+ / 8bitdo SFC30
        RetroPie: 4.6 official

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        • Lyle_JPL
          Lyle_JP
          last edited by

          Snes-next plays Yoshi's Island perfectly on a pi3. My nephew beat the game during our vacation, and I don't remember frame stutter on any levels. The only SuperFX game that lags noticeably on snes-next is Doom, and that runs smoother on pocket-snes (which takes a little more configuration).

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • qix77Q
            qix77
            last edited by

            You'd be surprised how little power it takes to emulate 8-bit and 16-bit systems (by that I mean post 1994 computer tech). It really comes down to how well an emulator is written.

            BuZzB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • BuZzB
              BuZz administrators @qix77
              last edited by

              @qix77 http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2011/08/accuracy-takes-power-one-mans-3ghz-quest-to-build-a-perfect-snes-emulator/

              Some machines are very complicated to emulate accurately - eg The Amiga. Lots of custom chips, and tricky timing

              To help us help you - please make sure you read the sticky topics before posting - https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

              qix77Q 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • qix77Q
                qix77 @BuZz
                last edited by

                @BuZz Oh. That is very true (I'm bit into Amiga emulation and have been following UAE for many many years now). It goes back to what I was mentioning. If the software is written well enough. However Emulation will never be perfect, but it's pretty damn good.

                My nephew came over today. He's nine years old. I hooked up my Pi 2 to the TV and he's been addicted to it ever since. He asked if he could take it home. lol.. Well, I know what to get him for Christmas. lol

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                • allenpieA
                  allenpie
                  last edited by

                  I have a pi3 the only systems that don't run the best are n64 games to be honest just not that smooth and audio issues
                  PSX 1 games run pretty damn well, and SNES 100+ titles all work great
                  Sega and Sega Master work like a CHARM

                  I'm very happy with the amount of games it's runs them smooth

                  Retro Pie and Chill

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                  • ShakzS
                    Shakz
                    last edited by Shakz

                    Man...those systems are lightweight. They run perfect on my Pi1 b+ and my Pi Zero....
                    You need a Pi 2/3 for the cd based systems but all cartridge based systems run great on Pi1/Pi Zero...save the N64...which does not work well on any pi....but its getting better.

                    RetroPie tips, tricks, and tweaks: https://www.youtube.com/eazyhax

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                    • D
                      drake999
                      last edited by

                      The emulators you mention all run extremely well on the Raspberry Pi 3. They run extremely well on the Raspberry Pi 1 for that matter.

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                      • D
                        drake999
                        last edited by

                        To expand further on my above statement, I've found you really only start to see the hardware's limitations on either more advanced systems such as Dreamcast or N64, or if an emulator is still experimental and not properly optimized for the Pi architecture yet such as Sega Saturn or 3DO emulation. I find the lack of 3DO emulation particularly perplexing since it is about equal in complexity to the Playstation and also less powerful (Playstation emulation also works well on the Pi2 and Pi3 by the way). I'm just chalking it up to a lack of popularity and public awareness so it has not been a priority for devs.

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