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, ...
Emulating the various PlayStation consoles has been commonplace for years, and developers constantly try to do so on various platforms. On Monday, the developers of PS3 emulator RPCS3 released a ...
The newly launched Raspberry Pi 5 mini PC offers more power than its predecessor and although not widely available as yet has been put to the test as a Nintendo games emulation station. The Raspberry ...
Raspberry Pi has been an exceptional platform to enjoy retro gaming, and 2021 has a lot to offer on the best emulators that can help in upgrading the experience to something enjoyable and worthwhile.
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 modern ideal of pixel art is a fallacy. Videogame art crammed onto cartridges and floppy discs were beholden to the CRT display technology of their day. Transmitting analog video within the ...
JamHamster is a self-described nerd, tinkerer, and lunatic; and we are inclined to believe it after seeing them hammer away on a Raspberry Pi Zero on Twitter. Electronic atrocities aside, they have ...
The brains of the machine is the current model of the Raspberry Pi, which has more than enough punchiness to emulate a Super Nintendo Entertainment System. For fun (and because it’s cheap), we’re ...
You’ve seen the Lego NES? Admittedly that is pretty cool (and I am definitely jealous), but how many hours of fun is that really? Six? Eight? You can definitely do better. What if, instead of making ...
Retro gaming on the Raspberry Pi is cool enough on its own but it's even more exciting to see the neat housing makers come up with for their retro gaming rigs. Today we've got an awesome build put ...
On top of the cost, it's even more questionable when you figure that the Pi probably can't handle most of the fighter games of the 90s. I remember MAME on a Pentium III: it was barely capable of ...