RetroPie forum home
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Home
    • Docs
    • Register
    • Login

    3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    3dolr-operapi4
    134 Posts 18 Posters 30.6k Views
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • A
      AdamBeGood @neek
      last edited by AdamBeGood

      @neek Yeah I had a token look yesterday, emulator seemed fine but I haven't found any ROMs just yet. I am sure there will be a quiet period at work today!

      It certainly seems harder to find that most ROMs, the 3DO version took seconds to obtain.

      Edit: I've got it working! My version seems to jump around rooms quite a lot, it isn't sequential. But it seems to be working..

      neekN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • neekN
        neek @AdamBeGood
        last edited by BuZz

        @AdamBeGood said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

        Edit: I've got it working! My version seems to jump around rooms quite a lot, it isn't sequential. But it seems to be working..

        My recollection of the arcade version was that it was smoother in the animation transitions. I feel like Daphne might cut off clips from the beginning or end sometimes, but it could be that my bar was a lot lower in the 80s than it is now, where I expect Spielberg-like quality and editing from everything I look at on a screen.

        I've found that [removed] to be a useful resource when looking to expand what my Pi can do.

        A BuZzB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • A
          AdamBeGood @neek
          last edited by AdamBeGood

          @neek said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

          My recollection of the arcade version was that it was smoother in the animation transitions. I feel like Daphne might cut off clips from the beginning or end sometimes, but it could be that my bar was a lot lower in the 80s than it is now, where I expect Spielberg-like quality and editing from everything I look at on a screen.

          No, I don't mind the video quality (pretty decent for 1983!), I mean that the game jumps around rooms.

          I think I was just used to the 3DO version, where you start at the Drawbridge everytime and then if you die there or in the next room (with the falling rocks); you start at the beginning again. Whereas on Daphne, you move on to another room regardless if you die or not.

          I've found that ArcadePunks.com to be a useful resource when looking to expand what my Pi can do.

          That is where I ended up going to, it's very good. Slightly interested in finding the v2.1 version which puts the drawbridge scene back in, but I think I will give this version a good play before I go hunting for that.

          Edit: I've got the v2.1 'enhanced' version of Dragon's Lair now, it seems much better. Flow makes more sense.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • neekN
            neek @trapexit
            last edited by

            @trapexit said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

            For those who don't know... American Laser Games who made a lot of the laserdisc video games of the 80's and early 90's used the 3DO (specifically FZ-1 with a better motor) for a number of later releases in the arcade. Not just did the home 3DO ports. There were a number of 3DO arcade games but most are pretty rare. I added a list on the wikipedia article. Seems someone has expanded on it.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_3DO_Interactive_Multiplayer_games#Arcade_Games

            The holy grail of 3DO arcade games is Beavis and Butt-head. There are several machines known to exist but no one has allowed dumping of the CD. The board appears to be semi-custom but no one has gotten any good images/video of it though. Die Alien Scum!! and Way of the Warrior were announced but were never released nor location tested as far as anyone knows.

            Today I learned something new. How cool!

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • trapexitT
              trapexit
              last edited by trapexit

              Many of us have been trying to get a copy of B&B. The game isn't all that good from the reports I've seen but I'd love to see if it works on retail hardware or if it was an enhanced board with more RAM.

              Speaking of which... on my TODO list is to add support to Opera for other memory setups. As far as I can tell it Portfolio OS supports upto 14MB of DRAM and 2MB of VRAM or 15 and 1. Seems a little odd given the 48MB address range available the max wasn't upto some combination upto full 48MB like 16MB+16MB for DRAM and 16MB for VRAM. Won't be all that practical to update a real console but for homebrew having the extra memory might be useful.

              https://3dodev.com/documentation/hardware/3do_memory_configurations

              @neek: they also created custom PBUS devices

              https://3dodev.com/documentation/hardware/pbus

              An arcade lightgun and a "SILLY_CONTROL_PAD" that was used for the coin and start buttons for Orbatak. The Orbatak trackball was just using the mouse API.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • George SpiggottG
                George Spiggott
                last edited by

                My copy of Road Rash has a second 'audio' disc. Is this just an audio CD or is it integral to the game? Also what is the most compact and practical file format to store 3DO games on? Mine are all .bin/.cue format but they have a couple of extra files as well.

                Currently running:
                Retropie 4.8.9 on a Pi Zero 2W (Overclock Settings: CPU 1400Mhz)
                ES-DE on a GMKtec K6 (Windows 11, 32GB RAM)

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • trapexitT
                  trapexit
                  last edited by trapexit

                  It's just an audio disc. Nothing to do with the game.

                  The most practical is bin/cue or iso. The most compact would be chd.

                  simpleethatS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • simpleethatS
                    simpleethat @trapexit
                    last edited by simpleethat

                    @trapexit does lr-opera support chd files?

                    EDIT: Also, general question for the room: Most of my 3do roms are bin/cue but I do have some iso/cue. Do I need the cue files for the iso files?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • trapexitT
                      trapexit
                      last edited by

                      Yes, it does support CHD if it was compiled in. I don't know if RetroPie enables it or not. I did see someone mention that that ES or whatever frontend they were using wasn't configured for CHD but that's a separate issue.

                      As for needing CUE files. No.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • George SpiggottG
                        George Spiggott
                        last edited by

                        My games also have .ccd and .sub files.

                        Currently running:
                        Retropie 4.8.9 on a Pi Zero 2W (Overclock Settings: CPU 1400Mhz)
                        ES-DE on a GMKtec K6 (Windows 11, 32GB RAM)

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • roslofR
                          roslof
                          last edited by roslof

                          3DO: My favorite things:

                          Out of this World: Vastly improved visual environments! Maybe the best platform for this game. Made me play through it a second time.
                          Star Control II improvements. Excellent VO. They were ported to other platforms, but I saw them first on 3DO.
                          Starblade: Again, improved graphics. Also available on PSX, but I saw in on 3DO first.
                          Pretty good road games, esp. Need for Speed & Road Rash. Need for Speed doesn't emulate well with the Pi 4B, but someday it will...
                          Twisted... Corny. Campy. So bad I enjoyed it.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • trapexitT
                            trapexit
                            last edited by

                            If you like Twisted... there is also Zhadnost: The People's Party.

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

                              @neek said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

                              I've found that [removed] to be a useful resource when looking to expand what my Pi can do.

                              Please read the forum rules. Links to sites with ROMs are not welcome.

                              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

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • A
                                AdamBeGood @ReadyPlayaWon
                                last edited by

                                @ReadyPlayaWon said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

                                @AdamBeGood said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

                                Trying out "Killing Time". I quite like it so far, but it is a bit juddery. Playable, just about.

                                Killing Time on my RPi4 is pretty smooth for the most part.

                                RPI4 is overclocked and the lr-opera overclock settings do sometimes help .. i'm at 1.5x (18.75Mhz) and it's pretty smooth for an old game (not 60fps butter smooth, but better than what the real game on the real console could do)

                                Have you played far into the game? I've found that when I get to Tess' Temple (east of the main hall), the game gets really choppy - to the point where sometimes the music cuts out, and twice I've not been able to go to other areas afterwards, they are just black and I can walk out as far into the map as I want without anything happening. Sometimes if the music cuts out, and I go to a different area and then back, the music resumes.

                                There is a room with a winged vase in the middle at the start of Tess' Temple, that is the bit my Pi really hates.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • A
                                  AdamBeGood
                                  last edited by AdamBeGood

                                  Can lr-opera play multi-disk games? I can't see a Disk Control option and wondered if there was some other way that works with this.

                                  I've got a few games I'd like to play that are multi-disk, but mainly Snow Job.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • trapexitT
                                    trapexit
                                    last edited by

                                    Most if not all 3DO multi disc games just save to NVRAM, ask to change disks, and reboot. The hardware for changing disks is not emulated so there is not point in having the disk control API setup since it there is nothing to do.

                                    A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • A
                                      AdamBeGood @trapexit
                                      last edited by

                                      @trapexit said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

                                      Most if not all 3DO multi disc games just save to NVRAM, ask to change disks, and reboot. The hardware for changing disks is not emulated so there is not point in having the disk control API setup since it there is nothing to do.

                                      I am still unclear how this works, if you have multiple ROMs for the same game (ROM per disk). How do you load the next disk? Should I have a playlist file or something like that.

                                      Good to know Opera can run multi-disc games anyway, I just don't quite get how it works yet.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • trapexitT
                                        trapexit
                                        last edited by

                                        Not entirely sure what you're asking. You just load the disc image like any other. You change it when it asks like you do any other.

                                        A 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • A
                                          AdamBeGood @trapexit
                                          last edited by AdamBeGood

                                          This post is deleted!
                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • A
                                            AdamBeGood @trapexit
                                            last edited by

                                            @trapexit said in 3DO: The Pi4 Emulation Nobody Loves?:

                                            Not entirely sure what you're asking. You just load the disc image like any other. You change it when it asks like you do any other.

                                            Cool, I'm sure it'll make sense when it comes to it then! Thanks very much.

                                            I've always gone to Disk Control in the Quick Menu when a new Disk is required (ie. for Sega CD multi-disk games).

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • First post
                                              Last post

                                            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.