What's the Retroarch Discord? I assume I need to join it before submitting that form?
No it doesn't matter. He'll whitelist you no matter what when he whitelists people.
What's the Retroarch Discord? I assume I need to join it before submitting that form?
I think found a fix for this. Go to LocalState/system/PCSX2/inis/ through ftp, open the file called GSdx.ini and look for interlace = 0 and change it to interlace = 3. It should work after you increase the native resolution. It works with Nocturne at least.Do yours ever shake quickly vertically up and down? Just a few pixels back and forth
Mine do and it's incredibly distracting, I haven't found a work around yet
I think found a fix for this. Go to LocalState/system/PCSX2/inis/ through ftp, open the file called GSdx.ini and look for interlace = 0 and change it to interlace = 3. It should work after you increase the native resolution. It works with Nocturne at least.
Good to know.Apparently Retroarch retail nuking itself was a somewhat widespread bug. Here's how to fix it if you get it...
On Xbox go to Settings > Storage > Apps
You'll see a blank app - no icon, no name. If you uninstall that, you can click the original link and re-download Retroarch. I believe you'll have to re-update the Online Updater things and re-add your ROMS, but otherwise lookin' good for me to be up and runnin' again soon!
Make it interlace = 7. It should work with every game.whoa that sounds promising!
I havent set up the ftp stuff for retail yet, so I will have to get to that. I will report back for sure.
The app finally updated and it's still working just fine ☺️Please keep me updated. I'm hoping it stays fine for everyone and that somehow I'll be able to redownload if/when this update not starting problem is resolved?
Thanks for the response...and sorry, I guess I was still new to it when I posted these questions but this helped me to wrap my brain around some of it!1. I'm pretty sure none of the PSX cores support zipped isos.
2. 16gb limit iirc.
3. Whatever system you want to emulate? I don't think any bois files are included but some emulators don't need them.
Got a couple of questions:
1 - what file type should I be looking for for the retail Retroarch PSX core to read it? I tried a couple of different types (Dino Crisis rar, Twisted Metal 2 with .bins and another type of zipped file) with no luck, and it's hard for me to know if it's that I'm using the wrong ROM format, or have to install additional things to get it to read them.
2 - Before I dive into the bigger wii games (Galaxy 1&2, Mario Kart), is Retroarch retail able to get 'em going without additional files?
Thanks for the response...and sorry, I guess I was still new to it when I posted these questions but this helped me to wrap my brain around some of it!
it did!
Can I ask what file type the wii games are and if you were just using the core that came with Retroarch? Would love to play me some wii Mario Kart and Galaxy!No worries, we should make this the OT and sticky all the useful info in the op.
edit: I'm really impressed how well Saturn, Gamecube and Wii games run. Full speed with no noticeable problems while the N64 core seem to have trouble with 2D elements. Dreamcast seems very game specific in how it runs, Bangai-o locks up when a lot of stuff is happening (which it pretty much always does) and Daytona 2001 runs at like 25-30 fps most of the time while Gundam and Power Stone 2 is full speed or near that.
Edit2: one thing that isn't talked about at all that I like a lot with this is audio out via the controller. No need to lower the volume when the family is asleep, I can blast the awesome Zanac x Zanac soundtrack without anyone waking up:)
Can I ask what file type the wii games are and if you were just using the core that came with Retroarch? Would love to play me some wii Mario Kart and Galaxy!
..but what file type is Retroarch recognizing? (.iso, .zip, .bin, something else?). I've been having trouble finding anything it runs at all, and I'm trying to decipher if I'm just using the wrong file types, or if I need to install something to make 'em readable.stuff that requires too much waggling is gonna be a pain to set up
i played through fire emblem and new super mario bros just fine, though
..but what file type is Retroarch recognizing? (.iso, .zip, .bin, something else?). I've been having trouble finding anything it runs at all, and I'm trying to decipher if I'm just using the wrong file types, or if I need to install something to make 'em readable.
All of the above.Do y'all want me to just rename this thread into an OT? Threadmark (or better yet add to the OP) that helpful info above ^?
This is awesome and really helpful for those like me who are about to start getting this setup. Thanks mate!Is this useful to anyone else (maybe an OT)? I prepped it for a pal to understand how to get Retroarch (Retail Mode) working on his Xbox. Considering how overwhelmed I was at first, thought it might be helpful to just break it down step by step. I believe this is correct, but feel free to let me know where I goofed?
Thank you!Is this useful to anyone else (maybe an OT)? I prepped it for a pal to understand how to get Retroarch (Retail Mode) working on his Xbox. Considering how overwhelmed I was at first, thought it might be helpful to just break it down step by step. I believe this is correct, but feel free to let me know where I goofed?
DOWNLOADING WHAT YOU NEED
- Fill out whitelist application link. You won't be notified when you're whitelisted, so just check the next step every now and then to see if you have.
- When whitelisted, open your Edge Browser on Xbox, go to https://tunip3.github.io/wowee/ and click on the Retroarch link. Download the resulting Restrospective (Retroarch) to your Xbox.
- Download My Files Explorer from Xbox Store ($2.99 US / $3.49 Canadian) to make things easy.
- Open Retroach, click "Online Updater" and one by one, do all of the updates. This'll take around 5-10 minutes.
- If you have additional Bios (PCSX2 for Playstation 2 Games, for example) add to USB drive.
- Put ROMS you own on exeternal USB hard drive/thumbstick
PREPPING MY FILES EXPLORER & USB HARD DRIVE
Open My Files Explorer:
For External/USB Hard Drive Transfer:
- Click three dots next to "This Device" (can be hard to spot - basically, three little dots near the address bar)
- Click Add Folder To Library
- Click Xbox console symbol on the left hand side, then back/menu button to highlight "Select" - Press A to confirm.
- Click "Isolated Storage" folder
- Below the address bar, click "Packages"
- Click 1e4... (dev mode) or 52269xbonedev1.Retrospective (retail mode) for Retroarch
- Click "Local State" folder
- Click System + paste in the folder of any Bios you want to add (the full folder). If you aren't pasting in additional Bios at this point, no problem, you can do it later by navigating here.
Now you're all prepped.
- Insert USB into XBOX
- Open My Files Explorer
- Click three dots next to "This Device" (again, the three little dots near the address bar)
- Click Add Folder To Library
- Click the External Hard drive symbol on the left then press the back/menu button to "Select" - Press A
- Click E: (might be D: for some people)
- All of your owned ROMS you added to the USB will show up for you
ADDING ROMS (once the above is set-up, this is all you'll have to do each time you want to add a ROM)
At this point, you're good to play.
- The ROMS should be clearly named and added to your USB hard drive. Recommended file types: .pbp for PS1, .wbfs for Wii, .z64 for Nintendo 64, and .smc or .sfc for SNES. Most files should work, but PS1 and Wii gave me trouble until I focused on those file types.
- Open My Files Explorer. Click Removable storage. Hover over the folder or the ROMS you want to add. Press start and click "copy."
- Click "Isolated Storage" > Packages (listed underneath address bar) > the either the .1e4 (dev mode) or 52269xbonedev1.Retrospective (retail mode) folders, depending what you see > then click Local State
- Paste your ROMS here by pressing "Start" and "Paste." I'd recommend making a folder either "ROMS" or broken down by platform ("SNES" / "WII" etc.), but also, it doesn't matter beyond being organized. As long as they are pasted here, they work.
PLAYING ROMS ONCE THEY ARE ADDED:
RETROARCH TIPS (once you get games working, I suggest doing these quality of life improvements):
- Basic way this works is click "Load Content" then select the appropriate drive for your ROMS. This would be U: for internal storage (most likely what you're doing if you folllowed the above steps), but you can also play directly off of the USB D: or E: if that's where they are.
- Click the rom, then you'll be given a choice of different emulators. Most work great, but see the note about PS1/Wii game file types above.
- That's it!?
SUGGESTED EMULATORS/CORES TO CHOOSE WHEN GIVEN THE CHOICE (this is what I've found - I'm sure the experts may have other ideas)?
- Go into Retroarch settings. Somewhere in User Interface or Menu Settings, there should be an option to edit your "hot keys." Make sure to add one to toggle the Retroarch menu with whichever input you prefer (I suggest either holding select for 2 seconds or L3 + R3 since they won't conflict with in game controls). This will let you change Roms on the fly or quit out of one instead of hard closing the app. It also lets you mess around with other settings once you're in the game.
- If you are running a game and it looks/plays great, I recommend opening the menu (whichever toggle you did above) and clicking "Add To Favourites." This makes it so that rather than go through the 2-3 steps of loading content/selecting core each time, and trying to remember which cores/emulators work best, you can just navigate to your Favorites list and click the name of the game and be playing in seconds. It will remember the settings you used. Also, it's just kind of badass to have one big list of games from SNES to N64 to PS1 to Wii and have them all launchable in a click.
- NES: Nestopia
- SNES: bsnes-mercury-balanced
- N64: Mupen64 Plus
- Gameboy: Gambatte
- GBA: mGBA
- PSX: Mednafen or PCSX Rearmed
- Genesis: Genesis Plus GX
- 32X: PicoDrive
Wow, awesome find! I always had problems with the mouse controls in Rock'n'Roll, this should make the game much more playable :)Okay I have stumbled upon what might very well be the best upgrade ever to an untouched retro game.
Have any of you played Rock'n Roll?
An Amiga game (among other platforms) where you roll a ball in a maze, collect keys, smack into walls until the crack, blow up walls with bombs, skid across ice, and try finding the exit. It's a fantastic game.
Well, with the PUAE emulator you get perfect analog stick controls!
In a game made in 1989!
The reason is the strange mouse controls:
slow mouse movement = the ball rolls slowly
fast mouse movement = the ball rolls fast
Imagine how you would move the mouse when going around a maze... In short it looks like you're possessed lol
But the PUAE emulator emulates the mouse cursor with the analog stick:
small stick movement = the ball rolls slowly
big stick movement = the ball rolls fast
And it's perfect!
you should probably include that you can connect to it and add games to it on pc with a network location because that is what i did when i watched dom video on it with the FTP app and just dragging bios to it. This post is probably still good for the overwhelming majority and thank you for the write up.Is this useful to anyone else (maybe an OT)? I prepped it for a pal to understand how to get Retroarch (Retail Mode) working on his Xbox. Considering how overwhelmed I was at first, thought it might be helpful to just break it down step by step. I believe this is correct, but feel free to let me know where I goofed?
DOWNLOADING WHAT YOU NEED
- Fill out whitelist application link. You won't be notified when you're whitelisted, so just check the next step every now and then to see if you have.
- When whitelisted, open your Edge Browser on Xbox, go to https://tunip3.github.io/wowee/ and click on the Retroarch link. Download the resulting Restrospective (Retroarch) to your Xbox.
- Download My Files Explorer from Xbox Store ($2.99 US / $3.49 Canadian) to make things easy.
- Open Retroach, click "Online Updater" and one by one, do all of the updates. This'll take around 5-10 minutes.
- If you have additional Bios (PCSX2 for Playstation 2 Games, for example) add to USB drive.
- Put ROMS you own on exeternal USB hard drive/thumbstick
PREPPING MY FILES EXPLORER & USB HARD DRIVE
Open My Files Explorer:
For External/USB Hard Drive Transfer:
- Click three dots next to "This Device" (can be hard to spot - basically, three little dots near the address bar)
- Click Add Folder To Library
- Click Xbox console symbol on the left hand side, then back/menu button to highlight "Select" - Press A to confirm.
- Click "Isolated Storage" folder
- Below the address bar, click "Packages"
- Click 1e4... (dev mode) or 52269xbonedev1.Retrospective (retail mode) for Retroarch
- Click "Local State" folder
- Click System + paste in the folder of any Bios you want to add (the full folder). If you aren't pasting in additional Bios at this point, no problem, you can do it later by navigating here.
Now you're all prepped.
- Insert USB into XBOX
- Open My Files Explorer
- Click three dots next to "This Device" (again, the three little dots near the address bar)
- Click Add Folder To Library
- Click the External Hard drive symbol on the left then press the back/menu button to "Select" - Press A
- Click E: (might be D: for some people)
- All of your owned ROMS you added to the USB will show up for you
ADDING ROMS (once the above is set-up, this is all you'll have to do each time you want to add a ROM)
At this point, you're good to play.
- The ROMS should be clearly named and added to your USB hard drive. Recommended file types: .pbp for PS1, .wbfs for Wii, .z64 for Nintendo 64, and .smc or .sfc for SNES. Most files should work, but PS1 and Wii gave me trouble until I focused on those file types.
- Open My Files Explorer. Click Removable storage. Hover over the folder or the ROMS you want to add. Press start and click "copy."
- Click "Isolated Storage" > Packages (listed underneath address bar) > the either the .1e4 (dev mode) or 52269xbonedev1.Retrospective (retail mode) folders, depending what you see > then click Local State
- Paste your ROMS here by pressing "Start" and "Paste." I'd recommend making a folder either "ROMS" or broken down by platform ("SNES" / "WII" etc.), but also, it doesn't matter beyond being organized. As long as they are pasted here, they work.
PLAYING ROMS ONCE THEY ARE ADDED:
RETROARCH TIPS (once you get games working, I suggest doing these quality of life improvements):
- Basic way this works is click "Load Content" then select the appropriate drive for your ROMS. This would be U: for internal storage (most likely what you're doing if you folllowed the above steps), but you can also play directly off of the USB D: or E: if that's where they are.
- Click the rom, then you'll be given a choice of different emulators. Most work great, but see the note about PS1/Wii game file types above.
- That's it!?
SUGGESTED EMULATORS/CORES TO CHOOSE WHEN GIVEN THE CHOICE (this is what I've found - I'm sure the experts may have other ideas)?
- Go into Retroarch settings. Somewhere in User Interface or Menu Settings, there should be an option to edit your "hot keys." Make sure to add one to toggle the Retroarch menu with whichever input you prefer (I suggest either holding select for 2 seconds or L3 + R3 since they won't conflict with in game controls). This will let you change Roms on the fly or quit out of one instead of hard closing the app. It also lets you mess around with other settings once you're in the game.
- If you are running a game and it looks/plays great, I recommend opening the menu (whichever toggle you did above) and clicking "Add To Favourites." This makes it so that rather than go through the 2-3 steps of loading content/selecting core each time, and trying to remember which cores/emulators work best, you can just navigate to your Favorites list and click the name of the game and be playing in seconds. It will remember the settings you used. Also, it's just kind of badass to have one big list of games from SNES to N64 to PS1 to Wii and have them all launchable in a click.
- NES: Nestopia
- SNES: bsnes-mercury-balanced
- N64: Mupen64 Plus
- Gameboy: Gambatte
- GBA: mGBA
- PSX: Mednafen or PCSX Rearmed
- Genesis: Genesis Plus GX
- 32X: PicoDrive
Same here, the game was fantastic but barely playable unless you had a perfect mouse and big mouse pad.Wow, awesome find! I always had problems with the mouse controls in Rock'n'Roll, this should make the game much more playable :)
PLAYING ROMS ONCE THEY ARE ADDED:
- Basic way this works is click "Load Content" then select the appropriate drive for your ROMS. This would be U: for internal storage (most likely what you're doing if you folllowed the above steps), but you can also play directly off of the USB D: or E: if that's where they are.
- Click the rom, then you'll be given a choice of different emulators. Most work great, but see the note about PS1/Wii game file types above.
- That's it!?
edit: I'm really impressed how well Saturn, Gamecube and Wii games run. Full speed with no noticeable problems while the N64 core seem to have trouble with 2D elements. Dreamcast seems very game specific in how it runs, Bangai-o locks up when a lot of stuff is happening (which it pretty much always does) and Daytona 2001 runs at like 25-30 fps most of the time while Gundam and Power Stone 2 is full speed or near that.
That game compatibly is bad even on the dedicated pcsx2 emulatorit did!
Champions of Norrath gets 17 fps tho :(
maybe the dream is dead (for now)
Yeah I've held on to this iso for years :/That game compatibly is bad even on the dedicated pcsx2 emulator
do you have any examples of working games? i've tried ratchet and clank going commando and hot shots golf fore so far, and it just hangs at a black screen. i would like to try and isolate my issue even further - the games and bios i'm using both work in standalone pcsx2, but obviously the compatibility will be more shaky with this.That game compatibly is bad even on the dedicated pcsx2 emulator
Do you think you could write up a simple step by step? I'm on Mac and Series X and when looking at vids about it I didn't feel confident translating it to a guide without being able to personally try it out confidently...you should probably include that you can connect to it and add games to it on pc with a network location because that is what i did when i watched dom video on it with the FTP app and just dragging bios to it. This post is probably still good for the overwhelming majority and thank you for the write up.
I plan to add this-hoping for some clarification first, though. When I did an auto scan, it read 7/12 SNES games. Then I manually scanned the folder (and set Snes as the console), then manually scanned the missing ROMS again. At some point all 12 showed up. Is one scan type preferable over others for getting the playlist maxed out?If you look around the Retroarch menus there is an option to scan a folder for content. Then it will create cool menus for all of your games broken down by console, so you'll have a SNES menu option with all of your SNES roms listed and so on. That way you don't need to specifically add games to favourites and it all looks very seamless. If there is a particular shader that you like to use i believe you can also make it the default for that console type. I'm a heathen that prefers a good shader on SNES games in particular so this is great for me.
I meant for Champions of Norrath compatibility is about the same as the standalone PC PCSX2do you have any examples of working games? i've tried ratchet and clank going commando and hot shots golf fore so far, and it just hangs at a black screen. i would like to try and isolate my issue even further - the games and bios i'm using both work in standalone pcsx2, but obviously the compatibility will be more shaky with this.
I plan to add this-hoping for some clarification first, though. When I did an auto scan, it read 7/12 SNES games. Then I manually scanned the folder (and set Snes as the console), then manually scanned the missing ROMS again. At some point all 12 showed up. Is one scan type preferable over others for getting the playlist maxed out?
Also, those same ROMS that were originally missing are the only ones missing thumbnails. Can't figure out how to get 'em, including for a Super Mario World.
if I can figure out those two parts I'll add 'em in!
UPDATE: manual scan seems best. That said, thumbnails aren't showing for me anymore. Messin' with my OCD!
Honestly i'm not sure why Retroarch does a lot of the weird quirky things it does. No shade to either the original developers or the people who ported it to Xbox but it's pretty unwieldy and crashes if you so much as look at it funny. I would love a "babby's first emulator" version of Retroarch that strips away some of the seemingly thousands of options and just is something reliable and simple that can be used to play games. Retroarch seems like it could be something fantastic with the bugs ironed out and if you have a few days to sit there and tweak everything ad infinitum but for now i've taken a break from it.
Honestly i'm not sure why Retroarch does a lot of the weird quirky things it does. No shade to either the original developers or the people who ported it to Xbox but it's pretty unwieldy and crashes if you so much as look at it funny.
I would love a "babby's first emulator" version of Retroarch that strips away some of the seemingly thousands of options and just is something reliable and simple that can be used to play games. Retroarch seems like it could be something fantastic with the bugs ironed out and if you have a few days to sit there and tweak everything ad infinitum but for now i've taken a break from it.
For what its worth, i went into menu and appearance settings and turned a lot of the menu clutter off. Between that and the playlists, I now find it really simple to navigate and look at (but granted I'm not super picky about some of the stuff other people might be).Honestly i'm not sure why Retroarch does a lot of the weird quirky things it does. No shade to either the original developers or the people who ported it to Xbox but it's pretty unwieldy and crashes if you so much as look at it funny. I would love a "babby's first emulator" version of Retroarch that strips away some of the seemingly thousands of options and just is something reliable and simple that can be used to play games. Retroarch seems like it could be something fantastic with the bugs ironed out and if you have a few days to sit there and tweak everything ad infinitum but for now i've taken a break from it.
CRT Royale looks amazing on a 4K display.What are the best retroarch shaders?
Also is there anyway to not have metroid prime stutter
What are the best retroarch shaders?
Also is there anyway to not have metroid prime stutter