mupen64plus-gles2n64 small screen in the bottom left hand corner still not fixed following instructions.
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@full-pixel said in mupen64plus-gles2n64 small screen in the bottom left hand corner still not fixed following instructions.:
Also, about just using normal retropie, I can't get ssh nor samba to work and the file transferring became impossible for me to figure out without doing it within raspbian.
Install the desktop on RetroPie and start it from EmulationStation - https://retropie.org.uk/docs/FAQ/#where-did-the-desktop-go.
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I have it where it boots to console as it is and typing startx + enter to get to the gui or emulationstation + enter to get to retroarch already.
I've messed inside the console trying to change settings and also in retroarch but I'm pretty sure that if it's possible to fix it for a pi 3 that I'm goofing it. The very tiny size.
Or am I missing the point of something here? I'm an eternal noob really.
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@full-pixel said in mupen64plus-gles2n64 small screen in the bottom left hand corner still not fixed following instructions.:
What older version of raspbian do I use? Are you saying no version of raspbian can install the newest retropie?
not the latest. but if you're new you should follow first installation and use the official image, which has a supported version of raspi os: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/First-Installation/
dual booting, manually installing, i feel like you're adding layers of complexity to this. official retropie image with the default n64 emulator will not show this issue as far as i'm aware. transferring roms/files is all covered in the docs.
and if the n64 games don't work still, verbose log please: https://retropie.org.uk/docs/Runcommand/#launch-with-verbose-logging
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I'll have to design my frame to have easy access to the sd I suppose (or get retropie to read txt files so it can be a book reader along with a video game playing device) but why does that link's video not match what's written? Also why can't you just directly paste in the roms and or bios into the directories if you were to say put the retropie sd into a Linux machine with access to roms and bios? If you can isn't the instructions making things more complex than they need to be? If you have to use two computers anyway why does it have to be ssh, samba, or this odd creation of a pi specific usb (and relinking directories using a console to make sure that the usb works (along with turning off the usb transfering)).
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I don't understand what I'm doing wrong with the console. It's not working.
First I Disable USB ROM Service script within retropie's gui, then exited to the console and:
sudo mv -v /home/pi/Retropie/* /media/usb0/ mv: cannot stat '/home/pi/Retropie/*': no such file or directory
Then I tried
sudo mv -v /home/piRetropie/* /media/usb)/dev/sda1
And it told me 'cannot stat'
Then I tried just to see if I was doing things backwards
/dev/sda1
And it told me permission denied basically.
But on the bright side the non-usable retropie has much better resolution and scaling than my raspbian + retropie so far.
And like I said before the video doesn't match.... I'd try basically transferring the roms but this spare sd is only 16 gb and my other raspbian is 32, my roms are too big for it.
Edit: I've been forced to forgo most of my psx titles to compensate and just use retroarch's blue bios tier file manager to copy things over other than most of the psx. I suppose that's what I have to do.
Edit: can't I just put a library folder in the root of the retropie's sd and then use nano or something to read txt files? Possibly neither here nor there, but the gripe behind wanting to have two OS's is that I can't read a book.
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You need to use the proper casing when entering the commands you've copied from the docs. Linux filesystems are case sensitive and
/home/pi/Retropie
is not the same file as/home/pi/RetroPie
(1st command you posted) - the error tells you the file/director cannot be found. The rest of the commands are similar, you've omitted characters or added some extra ones - make sure you follow the exact syntax of the command from the doc page, othewise you'll get errors.You can use
mc
(or just start File Manager from the RetroPie system) for a file manager with text interface, if you want to navigate/copy/view files and not enter commands manually. -
Regardless sound isn't working no matter the fact that it can detect my sound card so that's my current issue. That and I accidentally pasted in my small psx collection outside of the psx folder and it would not let me delete it for some reason to try again within it's file manager. Also I tend to pay attention to case so I'm not sure that's the issue with how it was getting my F6 and F7 mixed up and other things.
It only lets you select through the jack and not usb sound card despite detecting the sound card within it's gui. I just don't get it. I'd use lakka but they don't easily work with composite and most of it's nightly versions were allowed to be deleted. Lakka easily links to usb but is it's own ball of troubles.
It plays nicely in fullscreen though, after I pasted the n64 and such in. Just no sound so I may just go ahead and do without n64 considering it's making my pi only able to do one thing, play games (silently). Mednafen has the same issue of silence with my usb sound card on the newest raspbian os but the older plays the have sound while being extremely slow, even gb emualtion. This begs the question should I downgrade my retropie to get the sound driver working? For the record both 2018 raspbian and 2021 actually have sound output, just not in mednafen for the newer and for the older it works in both.
Is it normal for the keyboard to start glitching the F's around though?
Edit: I guess it needed a reboot. The sound is working but I think I'll just connect it to a puppy linux next time I want to paste files around, thanks. Though I've not done it yet as this card is merely primarily "my n64 emulator distro" anyway as it is.
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@full-pixel said in mupen64plus-gles2n64 small screen in the bottom left hand corner still not fixed following instructions.:
It only lets you select through the jack and not usb sound card despite detecting the sound card within it's gui. I just don't get it.
The audio menu is for configuration only for the on-board audio. If you want to use an USB soundcard, then disable the onboard sound and the system will use automatically the external USB card.
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I probably did that too, trying to turn it off, before rebooting but assumed the rebooting fixed it. I had edited my post saying that it was working while assuming the reboot did it. Thank you for the clarification as otherwise people reading my posts would be mislead if they had the same issue.
It's working okay now all things considered. I'm surprised at how well the scaling works as on the raspbian + retropie the text is harder to see and the borders are a bit off even in the terminal. I should try to copy retropie's font to my other sd cards with raspbian + retropie on them to make the console more visible.
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It's working okay now all things considered. I'm surprised at how well the scaling works as on the raspbian + retropie the text is harder to see and the borders are a bit off even in the terminal. I should try to copy retropie's font to my other sd cards with raspbian + retropie on them to make the console more visible
Glad you got it sorted out, actually RetroPie is using Raspbian (RPI OS) Lite underneath, so there's no specific font that's included in RetroPie.
Maybe the borders' position have something to do with the Overscan settings for the display ? Or you may try to increase the font size from the Setup script, as explained here ?
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