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

    Dolphin emulator running on RP4B 64bit

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion and Gaming
    dolphin emuwii64-bit
    36 Posts 15 Posters 20.9k 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.
    • T
      Trispc
      last edited by

      So I've tried doing this guide and managed to install the latest Vulkan drivers in Raspi OS Bullseye, however I can't get Dolphin to install. I'm following the steps exactly.
      Am I missing anything?

      WODAKW 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • WODAKW
        WODAK @Trispc
        last edited by

        @trispc said in Dolphin emulator running on RP4B 64bit:

        @wodak I'm trying to do that too using the new Raspbian Bullseye 64bit.
        For some reason when following the steps here I had to keep manually installing different packages which didn't install from the dependencies listed on this guide, and had to look up the proper names for most of them, but eventually it let me build Mesa version 22.
        I am suprised tho that you didn't get better performance, I'll test and see how it goes.
        But I have already tested on a regular Pi 4, 4GB running Konstakang Android 11 and was able to get better performance running the MMJR build of Dolphin. I'd say it was close to full speed for some games, but still gotta do more testing of easier to emulate stuff and report back.

        I'm still on buster...I'll wait till Raspberry Pi OS becomes stable on bullseye and then I'll try again...but I don't except any kind of miracles :)

        I still think that RP4 is not really capable of running Dolphin at decent level....

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • WODAKW
          WODAK @Trispc
          last edited by

          @trispc said in Dolphin emulator running on RP4B 64bit:

          So I've tried doing this guide and managed to install the latest Vulkan drivers in Raspi OS Bullseye, however I can't get Dolphin to install. I'm following the steps exactly.
          Am I missing anything?

          I didn't update my Dolphin to the latest version.....maybe you shoud try a more recent installation of Dolphin described in Building Dolphin on the Pi 4: 2021 Edition from bomblord.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ExarKunIvE ExarKunIv referenced this topic on
          • P
            pscotto1234
            last edited by

            Any updates regardin dolphin on rpi4?

            DarksaviorD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • DarksaviorD
              Darksavior @pscotto1234
              last edited by

              @pscotto1234 I managed to build the libretro version and sin and punishment 2 ran at like 10 fps. It was just a test. I have an arm-based mac mini for that.

              Pi4 at 2Ghz. Bullseye 64bit lite. Latest stable kernel. The last mesa driver I could install was 21.3.x I think. 22 wouldn't build. I managed to build retroarch with vulkan but I couldn't get any emulator to work with it. It wouldn't have helped anyways. I only saw an improvement for flycast when I tried it on batocera which has vulkan pre installed.

              hooperreH 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • hooperreH
                hooperre @Darksavior
                last edited by

                This post is deleted!
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • G
                  GoshGeeGolly @pi4papiba
                  last edited by

                  @pi4papiba said in Dolphin emulator running on RP4B 64bit:

                  @gandalth23
                  So, not much better than it used to be in opengl.
                  I really thought vulkan would make some of my favorite games playable.

                  Have you tried Wind Waker? in my tests with opengl it run almost playable a year ago, around 20-25 fps in the initial village. At the time, vulkan was super glitchy but there was improvements already.
                  I really want to give it a try since the last time i did it was like 6 months ago but it would be super time consuming and i dont have the time right now to build everything from scratch.
                  Another thing: using vulkan you can tick an option in dolphin settings to do HW texture decoding. It should improve performance.

                  Edit:
                  heres gecko code to try running double dash in 30fps mode too

                  [ActionReplay_Enabled]
                  $Force 30FPS
                  [ActionReplay]
                  $Force 30FPS
                  0448C388 00000002

                  Anyone really smart here who follows the Raspberry Pi Scene much?
                  The Pi4, they're working on some kind of better GPU driver, have been since launch. I'm wondering if once that driver ships that it'll speed things up?

                  I'd love to see 24 / 30fps solid Wind Waker on the Pi4.

                  I don't think we'll see a Pi5 for at least 3 or 4 more years to be honest.

                  DarksaviorD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DarksaviorD
                    Darksavior @GoshGeeGolly
                    last edited by Darksavior

                    @GoshGeeGolly The latest bullseye pi os update does not include vulkan. At this point you might as well wait for a pi5 and the next version of the pi os.

                    I recently figured out how to properly install vulkan by using pikiss instead. Even then, you need retroarch and the cores compiled for vulkan. Retropie does not do that. Pikiss includes pre-compiled binaries but most of them crash when switching to vulkan. Only lr-flycast worked for me and I did notice a speed increase.

                    It's been a few months since the last time I posted here and I haven't changed my opinion. Get an old pc instead.

                    retropieuser555R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • retropieuser555R
                      retropieuser555 @Darksavior
                      last edited by

                      @Darksavior does flycast run slowly on that many games though on an overclocked 32bit pi4? I've only ever found Shenmau runs at a little slower than the games on a Dreamcast (that I can notice from the original games I own anyway)

                      Definitely agree about waiting a few more years for Dolphin on a pi though. It'll be when the next revisions have that bit more grunt power to handle it.

                      Pi 5 4GB

                      Retroflag GPI with raspberry pi zero 2 w/ wifi

                      Retroachievements:- lovelessrapture

                      DarksaviorD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DarksaviorD
                        Darksavior @retropieuser555
                        last edited by

                        @retropieuser555 I usually test sonic adventure 2 since the slowdowns are seen right at the first level. CPU 2000/GPU 750. There are a lot of framedrops on that downhill. With vulkan those are almost eliminated.

                        Without vulkan, the standalone version of flycast is faster than the included retroarch version. Cmitu has a wip script if you want to try it. Loading games from ES loads to flycast's menu instead. https://github.com/cmitu/RetroPie-Setup/tree/flycast-standalone

                        I'm not sure what's up with redream. Overall, it's way faster than any version of flycast but the huge frame drops to the point where it can make the game freeze for a split second makes me go back to flycast.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • AwesomeKingClemA AwesomeKingClem referenced this topic on
                        • AwesomeKingClemA AwesomeKingClem referenced this topic on
                        • 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.