Can't exit out of games to main menu or save games
-
@sirdevin You could also plug in a USB keyboard and press f4 to drop out to the terminal then reboot. Then after you can setup the keyboard to use as a controller and reset with that?
-
@pjft If the "Emulation Station" controls are these ones (http://www.emulationstation.org/assets/featurettes/full/controllers_cropped.png), then yes that is fully set up.
I've selected the "Update Retro Pie Setup Script" option from the Retro Pie Setup menu and am still having the issue. Do I need to select "Basic Install" again or something further?
-
@CodeDrawer is there a certain terminal command to reboot?
I have the keyboard plugged in and pressing F4 doesn't do anything. I have the same movement and button controls like I did with the controller but nothing else.
-
@sirdevin yeah. At the end there's a new option for setting a hotkey. Make sure you reconfigure them and explicitly press select on that entry. See if it helps.
-
@sirdevin Yes the command is sudo reboot
then hit enter -
@pjft That was it! I think that was user error as I assumed that the "Hotkey Button" in the mapping was for the silver Xbox button or something as I thought that every one of those entries had to be a different button.
SOLUTION for future people with the same issue: When you are mapping your buttons on the Emulation Station controls (which I posted a link to a picture above if you are unsure which controls menu I may be talking about), you have to make sure that the "Hotkey Button" in that menu is mapped to Select on the Xbox controller.
Thank you @pjft and @codedrawer for your help!
-
Ok, going to reopen this.
I fired up Donkey Kong 64 and despite running really choppy and slow, the same Right Shoulder + Select combo doesn't save the game. I can Select + Start back to the main menu, but can't save. Is there a different thing I have to map for the N64?
-
The problem is that you might not have over-clocked your pi.
-
@CodeDrawer Yea I havent touched anything with the over clocking. So I'm guessing that's necessary for N64 games to run properly? Even on the Pi 3 with the Quad core processor? Although it may not be utilizing all of the cores.
-
The pi 3 not overclocked is the bare minimum. Overclocking helps make it less choppy. You get that with every game really.
-
Normally you can type sudo raspi-config to change the overclock. BUUUUUUUUUUUUUT the raspi 3 won't allow it. But there are still ways to overclock the pi 3. I'll find it just one sec.
-
http://www.jackenhack.com/raspberry-pi-3-overclocking/ @sirdevin The biggest thing is, is that you need heat sinks.
-
Ok, good to know. I have an i7-5930K gaming rig that I've wanted to play around with the overclock settings. It's liquid-cooled so I believe that will allow me more room to overclock safely. I know overclocking for Windows computers can be a bit tricky and so far I haven't found a good resource for information about properly overclocking and what to look for. Do you or anyone else know where I could find more solid info about PC overclocking?
And yea any info that you have about Raspberry Pi overclocking would be greatly appreciated. Thank you so much!
-
Don't worry about windows. I'll help you through to get the pi 3 overclocked.
-
Here is a better reasourse. https://github.com/RetroPie/RetroPie-Setup/wiki/Overclocking
-
Right from the github page :
Manual Overclocking
All Raspberry Pi models can be manually overclocked by editing /boot/config.txt and rebooting. Read the SSH page if you are not familiar with editing text files in Linux.
Parameters are set like:
parameter=value
For example, to set the ARM to 1000MHz:
arm_freq=1000
Useful Parameters
The following speed parameters can be set:
arm_freq - speed of the ARM core core_freq - speed of GPU processor core, keep it the same as gpu_freq gpu_freq - speed of all GPU components, keep it the same as core_freq sdram_freq - speed of SDRAM sdram_schmoo - a set of SDRAM timings
The following voltage parameters can be set:
over_voltage - voltage of ARM and GPU over_voltage_sdram - voltage of all SDRAM parts (c, i, and p)
The voltage starts at 1.2V and adjusts up or down in 0.025V steps. 0 is equal to 1.2V, the minimum -16 is 0.8V, and the maximum 8 is 1.4V. Voltage starts to help when running core/GPU/SDRAM at or over 500MHz.
To set voltage greater than 6 you must set force_turbo=1 which voids the warranty.
-
But @sirdevin I can get you editing that text file. Just know what you're doing! :-)
-
@CodeDrawer Awesome thanks for those links. I could just use my Cooler Master V8 and throw some thermal paste on there and call it good haha XD
I don't think I have any heat sinks laying around that would fit that. That may be a project for a later date once I've gotten some of the other parts working as I def do not want to burn out my Raspberry Pi.
I'm assuming I can just edit the text file with Notepad++ or something right?
-
@sirdevin I was thinking you could use the pi from terminal! :-D
-
@CodeDrawer through PuTTY or something?
Contributions to the project are always appreciated, so if you would like to support us with a donation you can do so here.
Hosting provided by Mythic-Beasts. See the Hosting Information page for more information.