Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?
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@caver01 said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
@briankross You can disable the warning for lr-mame2003. Check the wiki.
Ah, so that is what the wiki was talking about, thanks! I should have been able to put those pieces together... lol
Also, you will find that AvanceMAME is your best option for trackball, spinners, and if you want to play vector games.
Thanks for your insight.
There are other threads about these topics.
I'm sure of it. I always take the time to research on my own first before I request time of others. I hope you didn't mean to imply that I didn't. I'm new to all of this and like with anything new, you don't know what you don't know. I've spent about two weeks researching and answering my own questions, but sometimes it's best to ask your own question, in a fresh thread, with your own words.
Thanks again.
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@briankross said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
I hope you didn't mean to imply that I didn't.
Not at all. I am often commenting from a mobile device and I don't always take the time to find links even though I usually have specific threads in mind. That said, here are some good ones:
Trackball config in AdvanceMAME
How to make vector games look their best
Don't feel like you can't ask questions. There is a lot of help already written, but RetroPie evolves and nobody has the same setup. I have a lot of respect for everyone who contributes time and energy to RetroPie, but I also know the Pi is a device for learning (a tinkerer's paradise) and the developers here are bringing together software from a lot of different sources in a unique way. It's incredible and amazing how much capability we have, but each emulator has idiosyncrasies sometimes beyond our control (I.e. MAME ROMset complexities)--but those challenges are half the fun!
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If you are in this for arcade games like I am and you are using a pi3, you might come to the same conclusions as me:
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lr-mame2003 is the best default emulator for arcade support. Because it is a libretro core, you take advantage of retroarch benefits. For me, that's flexible configuration via RetroArch configs, but more importantly, a great set of shaders for an authentic CRT look on LCD displays.
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lr-fba-next is an important replacement for MAME whenever possible (neogeo, fighter games, etc) as this emulator is fast. Because it's a libretro core, you get the good shaders too.
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AdvanceMAME 1.4 is best for trackball, spinners, complex key mapping (single joystick tank stick), and vector games.
The combination above leads to some confusing configuration trying to support multiple ROMset versions, but if you can keep it straight, you can assemble the best combination of games/emulators.
It's just my opinion (not everyone cares about CRT scanlines or trackball support) but it is what I have learned over the long haul.
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Right on, your insight is much appreciated. I'm getting to know retroarch little by little, and looking forward to digging in.
Is it common (or best practice) then to use different emulators for certain mame games? My first (inexperienced) thought was to have one emulator for all classic mame games to keep it consistent. Right now it sounds best to find the right emulator for the job.
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said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
lr-mame2003
Some games listed seem to play correctly (although I don't have a trackball yet).
Centipede, Galaga, and Dig Dug do not start.fyi these all work for me in lr-mame2003. guessing you have an incorrect romset, or badly built roms, at least for these games. you need the 0.78 set for lr-mame2003.
lr-mame2003 doesn't currently support trackballs, although i'm hoping to fix that soon.
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@dankcushions said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
lr-mame2003
Some games listed seem to play correctly (although I don't have a trackball yet).
Centipede, Galaga, and Dig Dug do not start.fyi these all work for me in lr-mame2003. guessing you have an incorrect romset, or badly built roms, at least for these games. you need the 0.78 set for lr-mame2003.
Thank you, I have a working romset now. :-)
lr-mame2003 doesn't currently support trackballs, although i'm hoping to fix that soon.
Got it, thank you!
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@briankross You should also consider the Arcade folder. I have selected about 100 classics and have placed them in that. You can then have all your roms in just one clean folder and configure each game to a particular emulator depending on the version of the rom. So I have all my vector games in there with everything else but they use Advance Mame with some tweaks as detailed by @caver01 here.
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@briankross Yes! @rbaker is exactly right--if you were already thinking one emulator for all of your favorite MAME games, but are realizing like most of us that it works better (and sometimes the only way it does) is with a specific emulator for a given rom--then you want to use the Arcade folder when you have it all figured out.
Basically, you go about setting up the different emulators the best way you need to according to the games you want to play. Then, you get to the point (especially with guests or youngsters) that it's frustrating to have to memorize what emulator to chose for each game. For example, "Where's Asteroids? Oh, for THAT game, you need to back up and switch over to THIS version of MAME," to which they say, "What's a MAME?" and you are like, hmmm. . . where to begin?
With the Arcade ROMs folder, you move all of your working ROMS from their respective emulator ROM folders into the Arcade folder. Then, you go through each one and hit a key to invoke the RUNCOMMAND when it launches and select the desired emulator. You can set the default, and adjust as needed. Basically, you are creating a single list inside Arcade (as though you have a single emulator running the games) and use the runcommand to launch each game. For instance, you might launch Joust with lr-mame2003, but Asteroids with AdvanceMAME 1.4 for good vector support. Obviously, you plan that all out ahead of time so when someone picks Arcade in Emulation Station, they are launching arcade games, but they don't need to know (or care) whether you are running MAME, FBA, etc.
If you haven't already, it's handy to keep a spreadsheet of each rom, what romset/emulator you are using. That's what I do.
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@dankcushions said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
lr-mame2003 doesn't currently support trackballs, although i'm hoping to fix that soon.
Oh man. . . That's the best news I have heard all weekend! When you are ready to do some testing I am happy to recompile and provide feedback if you want.
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You. Rock. :)
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I'm ready to make the move to the
arcade
folder and have a question.I use lr-mame2003 for all of my MAME roms except centipede and millipede. Inside of my
mame-libretro
folder I have amame2003
folder that holds the folderscfg
,hi
, andnvram
. Do I just move all of the above in thearcade
folder?If yes, then will the mame2003 roms act as if they were in the
lr-mame2003
folder when the runcommand is setup? As in, it'll save high scores, access samples from/pi/RetroPie/BIOS/mame2003/
etc?Does this make sense?
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@briankross Yes. Move that stuff into roms/arcade. It will behave the same as it does in mame-libretro. And since most of your games are 2003 like mine, when you first boot ES and it sees the titles in the arcade folder, launch one, and open runcommand. There, you can set the default as lr-mame2003. Then, you only need to go to centipede and millipede and change the emulator for those rims (to AdvanceMAME I suppose).
The stuff in the BIOS folder remains as-is and gets accessed by 2003 just like it did when you run it against roms in the mame-libretro folder.
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Edit: Kept the high scores etc.
Works like a charm, woo! Thank you. I have a pretty short list, but I'll make a spread sheet to keep track.
Since we have a similar setup for MAME, I noticed the graphics appear smoothed out and perhaps an added glow for centipede and millipede in AdvanceMAME. But I actually like the bit graphics better in lr-mame2003. Do you know about this by chance? I'll dig around.
My wife looks at me like I'm nuts so happy to see this all coming together. Then again, she gets to play her favorite game Tetris on NES so... lol. She saw Dragon's Lair (dle21) for the first time and loved it, so it's all working out. :-)
Thanks again!
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@briankross said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
@caver01
Since we have a similar setup for MAME, I noticed the graphics appear smoothed out and perhaps an added glow for centipede and millipede in AdvanceMAME. But I actually like the bit graphics better in lr-mame2003. Do you know about this by chance? I'll dig around.Found it.
Once in the game using AdvnaceMAME, press
TAB
, Video, Resize Effect = no, then "save for this game". -
When AdvanceMAME games are played, I do notice new folders created automatically.
Edit: It doesn't seem to affect EmulationStation selections, Arcade is the only MAME emulator shown.
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@briankross Those folders are created because the .rc file which you use to configure AdvanceMAME is pointing there for those things. If you were running Asteroids Deluxe with a background, the artwork would have to go in there. Samples too, where needed. I actually changed mine so the config file points to the BIOS folder (this is where mame2003 is pointed, so I am doing the same). It keeps my roms folder cleaner.
My wife is wondering when the project is going to be finished. She's caught on now that it is never finished, and by the time it seems to be, a new Pi comes out and we start again!
I am glad you got everything working. Now, it's about incremental improvements, learning about a game you never heard of, and adding things to it as you go.
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@caver01 said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
I actually changed mine so the config file points to the BIOS folder (this is where mame2003 is pointed, so I am doing the same). It keeps my roms folder cleaner.
this is a good place to ask a couple of questions i have about the advmame directories. i was going to update the defaults so these are saved in a sensible place:
iniSet "dir_artwork" "$romdir/mame-advmame/artwork:$romdir/arcade/advmame/artwork" iniSet "dir_sample" "$romdir/mame-advmame/samples:$romdir/arcade/advmame/sample" iniSet "dir_diff" "$romdir/mame-advmame/diff:$romdir/arcade/advmame/diff" iniSet "dir_hi" "$romdir/mame-advmame/hi:$romdir/arcade/advmame/hi" iniSet "dir_image" "$romdir/mame-advmame:$romdir/arcade" iniSet "dir_inp" "$romdir/mame-advmame/inp:$romdir/arcade/advmame/inp" iniSet "dir_memcard" "$romdir/mame-advmame/memcard:$romdir/arcade/advmame/memcard" iniSet "dir_nvram" "$romdir/mame-advmame/nvram:$romdir/arcade/advmame/nvram" iniSet "dir_snap" "$romdir/mame-advmame/snap:$romdir/arcade/advmame/snap" iniSet "dir_sta" "$romdir/mame-advmame/nvram:$romdir/arcade/advmame/sta"
colons (:) separate multiple paths for the same thing.
so basically, all supplementary files will be in subdirectories of the 2 rom folders, with nothing in bios, rather than deep within within the /config/retropie/.... my thinking behind this is that mame2003 is only split over rom and BIOS folders because of a few arbitrary standards in libretro cores. we don't NEED to do this split for other mame emulators, so i figure it's better to just keep everything in one place.
the only thing i have to check is what happens when you have multiple directories for one setting set in the .rc file - not sure where new files are saved in the first, or all of the directories. if it's all, i might keep the previous /config/retropie/ there also, just so any old files are picked up. not sure who would notice if it stopped working, though...
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@briankross said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
@briankross said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
@caver01
Since we have a similar setup for MAME, I noticed the graphics appear smoothed out and perhaps an added glow for centipede and millipede in AdvanceMAME. But I actually like the bit graphics better in lr-mame2003. Do you know about this by chance? I'll dig around.Found it.
Once in the game using AdvnaceMAME, press
TAB
, Video, Resize Effect = no, then "save for this game".does this basically give a raw pixelly image like the other mame emulators? in that case, should this be a default? i could add that to my changes...
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@dankcushions said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
this is a good place to ask a couple of questions i have about the advmame directories. i was going to update the defaults so these are saved in a sensible place:
@dankcushions The defaults are probably fine as-is. I just moved mine to bios because I already had samples and artwork there. It made sense--one less thing to forget.
@dankcushions said in Need guidance: Best MAME emulator to use for classic 80's games?:
does this basically give a raw pixelly image like the other mame emulators? in that case, should this be a default? i could add that to my changes...
@dankcushions Yeah, the parameter is
display_resizeeffect none
anddisplay_rgbeffect none
will prevent pixel smoothing. That's probably the best default to be consistent with other emulators. However, I always change mine todisplay_resizeeffect filter
anddisplay_rgbeffect triad3dot
, as this is as close as I can get to a CRT shader in AdvanceMAME. Some games look good with it, some don't. Sometimes thetriad6dot looks better
. It just depends on the game resolution.I am running far fewer games on AdvanceMAME than I used to. It's coming down to Vector, Trackball/Spinner, and a few oddballs: (can't run Arch Rivals, Sarge, and Xenophobe on lr-mame2003 for some reason).
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@caver01 ok good! thanks - i will implement those above defaults after i've tested them.
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