I don’t have a lot of space for consoles and cartridges, or money for consoles and cartridges but I do have a decent computer hooked up to a TV. What’s the best way to get an authentic experience via emulation? Here’s what I have so far:

Retroarch Settings

  • HDR enabled (cant tell if it actually helps)
  • Run-ahead enabled
  • Mega Bezel shaders
  • Retrobit saturn controller (having trouble getting configured but has an excellent dpad)

Emulators/cores:

  • NES - Mesen
  • SNES - bsnes
  • Jaguar - Bigpemu (need to configure shaders)
  • Megadrive/CD/32X - Picodrive
  • PSX - ??? Swanstation?
  • Saturn - Beetle Saturn
  • N64 - Mupen64plus

Thing I need to work on:

  • Tweaking shader settings as the defaults are very dark
  • Configuring retrobit controller to work with Steam big Picture (how I launch Retroarch) and retroarch seamlessly
  • Possibly finding a Big Box theme that is focused on original artwork and not garbage

Any advice/pointers? My goal is to eventually have a “pick up and play” setup possibly with different 8bitdo/retrobit controllers for each system.

    • @PlasticExistence
      link
      English
      4
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      With the addition of the recent Groovy MiSTer core, this is probably the best bet if you want to play on a CRT screen since you’ll also get access to games / systems not available on the MiSTer.

      For those not in the know: Groovy MiSTer allows one to route the video and sound from an emulator on a regular PC through the MiSTer hooked up to a CRT. It is essentially replacing the need to use an old and modified GPU for analog video output.

    • JediwanOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 months ago

      MiSTer looks like crap though on a flat panel TV… I don’t have space for a big CRT.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        210 months ago

        It looks fine if you use the digital output rather than analog.

        If the purity of the analog signal is important, you can run it through a retrotink or OSSC. Although that’s another expensive addition to the setup.