Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’d be familiar with Nintendo’s hugely popular Classic Mini consoles. Starting with the NES, and now followed with the SNES, the consoles ship in a cute, ...
If you have toyed with the idea of building your very own retro Raspberry Pi powered handheld games console, but have not yet quite got round to it. You might be interested in a new electronics kit ...
The most popular use for a Raspberry Pi, by far, is video game emulation. We see this in many, many forms from 3D printed Raspberry Pi cases resembling the original Nintendo Entertainment System to 3D ...
One of the most popular uses for the Raspberry Pi is to play retro games through emulation. This is made relatively easy through RetroPie, a custom software package based on Raspbian specifically ...
The tiny, wildly popular $35 Raspberry Pi Linux computer may become a player in the game emulation world. A new Kickstarter project, launched on Tuesday, aims to create kits that will use the ARM ...
Nintendo is releasing its NES Classic Edition in November, a miniaturized version of the original console with 30 games built in and HDMI support. But modder Rated-E Mods has taken it one step further ...
One of the better winters I spent as a teenager was playing the classic 1998 PlayStation game Final Fantasy Tactics and listening to Built to Spill’s There’s Nothing Wrong With Love on endless repeat.
Page 1: Retro-Amiga Goodness With The Raspberry Pi 3 Page 3: Retro Amiga Hardware Mods And Overclocking Page 4: Running Software On Your Retro-Amiga Once you’ve got ...
Makers and hobbyists that enjoy building projects using the awesome Raspberry Pi single board computer might be interested in a new project published over on the Instructables website that provides ...
So far, everyone scrambling to get their hands on the much sought after Raspberry Pi seem to be hoping to use it as a media player. The cheap Linux computer is capable of decoding 1080p video, and its ...
How-To Geek on MSN
The perfect DOS gaming PC isn't an old 486: It's a Raspberry Pi
How I turned my Raspberry Pi into a DOS gaming PC ...
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