Futura Theme
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@FlyingTomahawk Looks really good! I'm looking for a theme for a bartop arcade i'm building and this might be a candidate.
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Very interesting. :) Looking forward to trying it out.
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Looking very good! What is the name of the font that you have used?
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@robertybob
Which font do you mean? I used 3 different fonts.
For the "select game" text I used the chu chu rocket font, for the system name and year in the top-left and top-right corners I used a font called sofachrome and for the main text like help menu, metadata, rom names etc... I used the good times font.
The sofachrome and good times fonts will have to be replaced to some other free license fonts before I can release this theme.
I personally will continue to use those fonts though once I have installed that theme into my RPi 3.Right now I am looking through the google fonts to find some worthy replacements for those two.
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Ah, Good Times! Shame about the licence thing, hope there's a decent replacement :D
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Yeah, too bad indeed. 15 years ago things used to be simpler. Either things were free or you just paid for it.
These days you have to be a lawyer to know and understand all those damn licenses.
I found a font for the main text stuff now I only need to find a matching font for the system name and year. -
What would be the best and easiest way to set all the emulators to detailed view mode?
Fake roms?
Real roms?
Gamelist?
Other setting? -
@FlyingTomahawk each system needs to have one game with an image
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Maybe I didn't formulate my question correctly.
I know how it usually activates the detailed view. I was just hoping to find a different way to do it.
So you are saying the only way would be to use real roms to do it? -
@FlyingTomahawk There is currently no way to force detailed view. The roms don't have to be real, but the gamelist xml needs to have at least one entry with an image that points to an actual file.
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I see...
Thanks.
You not might happen to know how to create fake roms for testing? -
@FlyingTomahawk Just save an empty text file with the appropriate extension. You can see the supported extensions for each system here https://retropie.org.uk/documentation/systems-in-retropie/
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@FlyingTomahawk: When I was making the Theme How-To for the wiki I made some fake games for the Spare theme. You can download the zip file here. It's just 15 games each for gameboy, nes and snes. They are just empty renamed .txt files, but they scrape fine with the built in scraper (not the sselph scraper).
You can make your own pretty easily (but it's time consuming):
- Make a new empty .txt file and rename it to game.zip
- Paste game.zip into every single ROM directory (eg: gb, new, snes, etc)
- When you restart ES, every system that accepts .zip format will now have a game in it called Game. This is fine for testing System View and Basic View, but as they aren't named after a real game, they won't scrape.
- For each system, go to Wikipedia and type in "list of [system] games", then choose one from the list and rename game.zip to whatever that game is. You can also check the RetroPie Wiki to get the right file extension (eg: .gb for gameboy games, so game.zip will be Aladdin.gb).
Like I said, time consuming, but it should do the job.
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Thanks guys.
That is simple enough for me.
Hopefully I'll be able to finish this theme in the next few days and then move it to my RPi for further testing. -
I finished the theme but I need to get it running on my Pi for further testing.
What are the right steps to do that? I accessed my Pi via FTP but can't find any theme folder. -
@FlyingTomahawk The file path is /etc/emulationstation/themes
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A less dangerous directory to place a theme is
/home/pi/.emulationstation/themes
This directory takes dominance over/etc/emulationstation/themes
and does not require you to chmod the directory to give you write permissions. -
To go along with what @Rookervik said, you can also add that path to your Samba shares so you can modify the theme without SSH or FTP just in Windows Explorer (or another OS, I'm not picky). Here's how:
SSH into your Pi (I use PuTTY) and type
sudo nano /etc/samba/smb.conf
Scroll all the way to the bottom and add the following:
[themes] comment = themes path = "/home/pi/.emulationstation/themes" writeable = yes guest ok = yes create mask = 0644 directory mask = 0755 force user = pi
After that, you will need to restart the samba service:
sudo /etc/init.d/samba stop sudo /etc/init.d/samba start
Then when browsing to \RETROPIE you will see a themes folder where you can add and modify your theme all you need.
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Thank you guys.
I'll get to it asap. -
Everything worked as explained, thanks. Putty is a very nice tool. I could create that theme folder and uploaded the theme files to my RPi.
I then downloaded the missing emulators/cores and put 1 fake rom in each rom folder.30+ systems showed and I could finally test this theme on the resolution that it was build for. On my Notebook I only had max 1366x768.
Because of that all the custom text needed to be moved to its right positions again.
It did work with one rom in each system and detailed view worked fine too.
When I activated the show FPS feature in ES it showed 45-59 fps VRAM: 172.78mb (texs: 130.83mb, fonts: 41.94mb). I am not sure if the theme crashes if you have 10+ systems active with 50+ scrapped roms in each one of them.
Would be nice if someone could test this in the near future.I think the next step now would be to create a package with a readme file and then offer it for download? Not very familiar with github. I used it once, a while back though, in combination with a program called sourcetree. Never really figured out the whole push and pull stuff.
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