RetroPie: A Raspberry Pi Gaming Machine

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You can legit play every retro game from every retro console on this little device. It's kind of crazy. I feel like I'm making it up, but I'm not. And it doesn't stop there. There are new modern features that we can add, like achievements, those dumb dopamine hits you get when you're playing your PS five and Xbox. You now get that when you finally beat the Special cup. Boom, achievement unlocked. And you can pretend like your life has meaning. You can also add Save States Game Shark Sheets. Are you kidding me? I used to have to install a physical device on my game Boy, to make that happen, you can also use whatever controller you want, pick your arrow, you can be there. And this is the craziest feature of all online multiplayer. No more Couch Co-op. You can be anywhere playing your friend and Mario Kart online. So in this video we're going to show you how to make your very own retro Pi Dream gaming machine. And by we, I mean me and Alex, I made him do all the work on this video for the past few weeks. I told him to forget everything but breathing and retro pi. Empty your mind of everything that doesn't have to. Do with Retro Pi. He knows this thing inside and out and he made sure that every step and every feature is perfect, right? Alex, no pressure. Be nice in the comments. It's his first time helping me with a main video. And by the way, we're going to play online together at the end of the video. Separate locations, two different raspberry pies. Now I know what you're thinking, Chuck. I can do this on my iPhone now. Sure, but it's not as cool. This is better. So just do this now before we get started. What do you need? How do you make this stuff happen? First, you'll need a raspberry pie. A Raspberry Pi four will work. I don't recommend anything lower. And if you have a Raspberry Pi five, you'll have a good time. Now optionally, if you don't have a raspberry pie, you can actually install ra pi on a machine running Ubuntu. Check the documentation on the specifics on that, but it's possible. But for this video, we're just going to cover raspberry pies. Now like any raspberry pie project, you'll also need a micro SD card. Size is up to you, but if you're going to load up a ton of ROMs, a ton of classic games, bigger the better. You'll also need a power supply, a keyboard, and some kind of monitor. This could be your tv. In fact, if you're going to be using this as a gaming console, which you totally can, a TV is preferable for our setup, we're using an old CRT tv. Alex found it in his parents' closet and had to show him how to use it. Poor kit. Optionally. You may want a game padd, we'll be using an Xbox controller, but you can pretty much use anything. Just make sure you check compatibility. And depending on your setup, you may want to a set of speakers, but if using HDMI, it should just output over that, we have links below for all that. Now Alex is going to show you how to set up Retro Pi on your raspberry. Pie. Alright, I got my raspberry pie, I got my micro SD card and I'm ready to start installing Retro pi. First thing you're going to want to do is put your micro SD card into your computer. So next I'm going to open up my web browser of choice. Don't come for me and we're going to go to raspberry pi.com. Now we're going to go over to software. Scroll down here and download for Windows or whatever operating system you're using. So I'm going to install that. This part's pretty easy, right? We've all installed things before and here we are. So first things first, I'm going to choose my device and my case, I'm working with the Raspberry Pi four, so I'll choose that one. Next, I'll click Choose Storage, and that'll just be my microSD card. And make sure you pick the right one because this will wipe everything off your storage device. So be careful. So now last step is to choose r os. So what I'm going to do is scroll down just a bit until I see Emulation and Game Os. If I click on that, there it is, retro Pi. And here you'll pick your version of Retro Pi depending on what kind of raspberry pie you have. But notice there's no version for Raspberry Pi five. Well that's because at the time of this recording, they haven't released one yet, or at least there's not for me. There might be one for you if you're watching this sometime in the future. Now don't worry, you can still install Retro Pi on a Raspberry PI five. I'll show you how to do it in just one second. But for now, I'm going to use this method. So let's click next and press yes and we're right into it. Alright, here we go. Retro Pi has been written to the SD card. You can now remove the SD card from the reader. So we're finished. I can remove the SD card, plug it right into the pie, boot it up and we'll be running retro Pi. But okay, what are you supposed to do if you have a Raspberry Pi five? Well, you'll do everything pretty much the exact same way, except instead of choosing retro PI as the operating system, well instead choose Raspberry pi os. You can just do the 64 bit version and then we'll write it to the card, eject it, put it in the Raspberry Pi five and boot it up. And from there you can install retro pi on top of Raspberry pi os. Chuck is going to show you how to do that right now. Okay, you're rocking a raspberry Pi five with raspberry pi os installed. Let's now install Retro Pi. First we'll make sure our repositories are up to date. Pseudo a PT update and then pseudo a PT upgrade y. Perfect time for a coffee break and it's done. One more coffee break in network, check coffee. Next we'll make sure that GI is installed pseudo A PTI install gi. It should already be installed just to make sure. And then we'll use GI to clone the repository of retro pi. We'll do GI Clone and then our repository just copy and paste commands will all be below. Then we'll hop into our Retro PI setup directory, sip and Ls, make sure it's there. Yep, there it is. CD Retro PI setup. We'll make the setup script executable with the CH mod command. And then we'll run that script with pseudo period slash and the script name Retro PI Setup sh. Ready, set, go. Now we're in the retro PI setup. Let's go through this. We'll hit okay. If you install 64 bit like me, you might get that message. It's not officially supported, but we'll still do it. To install everything, we'll choose basic install. In most cases that's what you want. We'll go ahead and click that or pit enter, say Yes and we're off to the races. The install might take forever like it did for me. And once it finishes, it may take you back to that same script prompt. You can exit that and then run the script once more. Here we got a different menu and we'll want to change a few things to make this thing work. First we'll scroll down to configuration and tools and then we'll select Autostart that way. Emulation station will auto boot. When your Raspberry Pie boots just select the first option and hit okay. And once we're back at the configuration menu, once more, we're going to change one more thing. We're going to enable the Bash welcome tweak, which will show additional system info on login. We'll go ahead and install that and then we can exit our config and then we'll do a pseudo reboot. Once rebooted ban, it should come up to emulation station. Alright, let's boot up this raspberry pie. I'm going to use the monitor cam for this so you can see exactly what it looks like. So I'm going to plug in the monitor through HDMI. Alright, monitor came on and I'm going to plug in the power. Oh, here we go. Alright, this is what you should see. Everything's just getting set up. And while this is setting up, I'm going to get my oh keyboard ready. This is a Raspberry Pi keyboard, but any keyboard will do. And also I got my Gamepad ready. So this is just an Xbox controller that I'm going to plug in. And again, you can use any USB gamepad that you want. Alright, here we go. So when you first open up Retro Pi, you're going to see this no game pad detected. Alright? Now, I would highly, highly, highly recommend that before you set up a game pad, you set up your keyboard. No matter what happens, if you accidentally configure your gamepad wrong or anything, you will always have the keyboard to fall back on. So first we got dpad up, so I'll just use the up arrow key. For start, I'll just use Enter Select. I'll just do shift and A BXY. I just did QWER. For the rest I'm just going to skip. If you just hold any button, it will skip. We'll talk about hot Keys more in a bit, but you definitely, definitely, definitely want to have a key set to Hotkey Enable. So I'll just do a space bar and I'll hit okay and we're in. So if I try using this game pad right now, nothing happens because I haven't configured it yet. So to do that, I'm going to go to my keyboard and hit start and go down to configure input and press a. Are you sure you want to configure input? Yes. Press a and let's see if it'll detect this game pad. I'm just going to hold any button. And there we are. So let's go through it. Super duper engaging content. Now if you have a Bluetooth controller, you can set that up too. Just press a to go into the retro PI menu and go to Bluetooth. Hey, I'm recording this a week in the future because I forgot to show you how to set up a few very important things. Things like your host name, password, wifi, localization settings, and SSH. Yeah, I forgot a lot, but you can do it all through the retro PI menu. We'll just go down to the Raspberry Pi configuration option or raspy config and I'll press A to open that up. So let me just zoom in here. This monitor's a little dirty and I'll go to this first option system options. So navigating through this menu is kind of weird. First you go up and down and choose the menu option you want and then you press right to highlight the select option, and then you press B to select that option. Really weird. But anyway, let's go into system options and we can go down to host name and select. And here we can put in the host name for our pie. So by default it's raspberry. I'm just going to set mine to gaming pie B because I'm in studio B at the Beautiful Network Chuck Studio. And I'll just hit enter. And there's actually one more system option we'll want to change. So let me go back into that menu and we'll go down to password. And yeah, it pops up in this little box in the bottom right corner. Let me zoom out. All right, I'll have my video editor zoom in on that. It is pretty tiny there, but I'm just going to type in my password and hit enter and then retype it. And there you go. Password changed successfully. Next, let's go down to localization options and we'll choose the second option time zone. So first you'll pick your country. So I'll do us and select, okay, and then your time zone. So I'm using central time, I'll pick Central. And let's go back to localization options one more time. This time choose the very last option, W, land country. And then you'll want to find your country again. And you can use these shoulder buttons to scroll through this list. Way faster. All the way down to you us. Here we go. Boom. And finally we'll go down to interface options and choose the second option S, s, H and enable S, SH. And that will allow you to remotely access your pie from another computer on your network. And we'll actually use this in the next section when we add games to our pie. But first, there's actually one more setting we want to change and that's the wifi. And we won't actually do this through the Raspberry Pi configuration tool. So I'm going to go right twice and choose Finish. It's asking if I'd like to reboot, I'll just hit yes. And this time I'm going to go to the very bottom option wifi. So I'm already connected to wifi here, but all you need to do is press A on this first option, it'll scan for wifi networks and then just scroll through and pick your network. Then just put in your password and you'll be good to go. But I feel like this retro pie is missing something. Games we need to add games, otherwise that's kind of the whole point. Now lemme show you how to get some ROMs on your device. Now I'm not going to show you how to get ros, I'm just going to show you how to get ROMs on your raspberry pie, your retro pi. Now my favorite way is through SCP or secure copy. We're going to copy the ROMs that we download or acquired in some means to our retro PI over the network, which means we'll first have to find out the IP address of our retro pie. Thankfully we can just do that pretty easily. We'll hit the retro PI configuration and there's a little spot called show ip. We'll select that. Now mine's going to be terribly small because I'm rocking A CRT, I can't even see it. Just going to ping it real quick to make sure I can get to it. 10 70.2 0.1 28. There it is. Now to use secure copy to copy some ROMs to it, this command should work across the board whether you're on Mac, Linux, or Windows. Now first I'll find my ROMs here, got a whole bunch of these suckers and I'm going to right click that and say copy as path. I'll type in TP dash R for recursive and I'll paste in that path and I'll do a back slash asterisk to copy all the folders as they should be to our new place, which will be our Raspberry Pi. Now my user name was Network Chuck at the IP address, 10 point 70.2 0.1 28. And then after that I'll put a colon, a tilda to target my home directory and I'll type in slash capital R retro capital p pi slash rams slash and that should be it ready, set, go. It'll ask me to accept all fingerprints I do. And then my password. And there they go. That's a lot of games. This might take a minute depending on how many games you have. So in the meantime, let's take a quick coffee break and I want to tell you about Alex and his problem. Yeah, he's got a problem. Passwords, you see I use Dashlane for password management for my team. They're the sponsor of this video and I use it to keep my password safe both personally and for my business. And that brings me to Alex. Alex has the worst password management health out of anyone I've ever seen. Every password's pretty much the same. In fact, when I first met him, he had every password physically written down in a notebook to help him remember them. But it didn't matter. They were all the same. And it was personal information, things you could probably guess is that you? Is that your employees? Do you not know? It's kind of scary, right? But with Dashlane it tells me, it tells me when Alex is being dumb about his passwords, it gives me password health on all my employees and I can make sure that they're generating secure unique passwords for every login. Silly Alex always wondered why he's always getting hacked. How do they keep guessing? My secure passwords, because they weren't secure Alex and because he never changes his passwords. Whenever there's a new hack, his password is all over the dark web. You didn't know that. When you hear about these companies with big password breaches, it happens to the best of them. Those passwords, your passwords end up on the dark web and if you don't have a routine of changing your password, someone has it right now and it's just a matter of time before they use it, that goes for you and that goes for your employees. But with dark web monitoring through Dashlane, it'll tell you if it finds the information the same way hackers will look at stuff on the dark web. Dashlane is using the same thing to monitor and make sure you're safe. So don't be an Alex, use Dashlane personally, it's amazing. And if you have an Alex on your team and you have a business, use Dashlane, you can make sure all the alexes are taken care of. And it's more than that. You can actually securely share passwords amongst your team and they even have passkey support. Pass keys are a lot more secure than passwords. Everyone's doing it and you can store those safely and securely inside Dashlane. So again, what do we want to do? Not be like Alex, get Dashlane, don't get hacked. Anyways. Now back to Alex. Now once you have all your ROMs in, there are a ton of things you can do to personalize how everything looks. I'm not going to show you all of these because that would take forever. So first I'll hit start and open up my main menu. I'll go down to UI settings and press a and I'm going to go down to game list view style. And you can see there's a few different options for you to make things look nicer. Personally I prefer grid, but you can try out the different ones and see which one you like. Also notice there's an option down here to ignore articles in case you forgot there are three articles, a, an and the and they can get kind of annoying when you're trying to sort things by name. So for example, the Legend of Zelda, it starts with the word the, but do you really want to sort under T? Personally I'd prefer to sort it under L, legend of Zelda. So that's where this option can really come in handy. Alright, so this looks okay, but all the games look exactly the same. So go back to your main menu, press A to go into a scraper and this will allow us to grab box art and other metadata like the year it was released and the description for every single game we have. So first we'll choose where to scrape from. Personally I've had better luck with screen scraper, but you can try 'em both out. Pick whichever one you like and then we'll go down to scrape now. And this is pretty cool. You can choose whichever system you want to go through. I'm just going to do 'em all and I'm going to turn user decides on conflicts off. That way it just does all of them automatically and then I can go through and fix the ones that messed up. Alright, let's click start. Alright, so I have almost 300 games on here, so this is probably going to take a while, alright, after only 15 years. No, it took like maybe 30, 45 minutes. We have all the box start we could want. It looks so clean, really good. And if we open up one of these games, it works like a charm. I'm going to be my main man Yoshi now that we're in the game, do you remember the hotkey button that we set earlier? So if I press the hotkey button just by itself, nothing happens. That's because you're not supposed to press it by itself, you're supposed to press it in combination with other buttons. So for example, if I press hotkey and start, it'll exit out of the game and bring me back to the retro PI menu. But there's more we can do. Let me open up a different game. So here I am in Donkey con country and I'm going to press hotkey and my right shoulder button at the same time. Alright, do you see that right there? Save state to slot number zero. So now when something happens, like let's say I die, I can hit hotkey and the left shoulder button to load that safe state. Pretty sweet, really useful for trying to get through some of these more difficult retro games and you can save more than one to do that. I'll hit hotkey and right on the D pad at the same time and look closely. You see that state slot one. So now when I make a safe state, it saves to slot number one and I can do it again. Go to slot two or three or four. If I press left instead of right, I can go backwards through the list. What else? Okay, hotkey and B will reset your game. I'm just going to load my save state so I don't have to go back there. Finally, hotkey and X will open up your retro arc menu. Now the retro arc menu has a ton of features, way too many for one video to cover. I mean you can get lost in this thing for hours, but this is where all of our emulator settings are stored. So for example, I can go down to controls, press A, go down to port one controls, that's player one, press A, and I can customize all my controls. So for example, a button, I could set that to be Y or X or select or start whatever. Now there is something extremely important that you must remember whenever you're changing any of these retro arc settings, they don't save automatically, you have to save them yourself. So let show you how to do that. I'm just going to keep pressing B until I reach the main menu and I'll go down to configuration file, press a and save current configuration. That is extremely important. Do not forget that. Alright, so let's start talking about some more advanced retro pie settings. So let's start with cheats. Why not? I'll go up to my quick menu here and go all the way down to cheats. And there's a lot of options here, but none of these are really going to help you unless you already have some cheats downloaded. And I'm going to assume you don't. But luckily Retro Pi has a really cool feature where you can actually download a bunch of pre-configured sheets for tons of different games. So lemme show you how to set that up. I'm going to back out all the way to my main menu and go down to settings. Then I'll go to the top user interface. And finally you'll go down to show advanced settings and turn that on. Now I'm going to back out and go back into user interface and we'll see a bunch more settings appeared. And I'll go down just once to menu item visibility. Now I'm going to go down to online updater and turn it on and I'll go all the way back. And now you'll see a new option on our main menu for online. Let's go in there and we'll go all the way down to update sheets and they're downloading. Alright, perfect. So now I'm going to go back to my main menu again and go up to quick menu and go all the way down to cheats and we'll choose load cheat file, replace. And here's all those sheets we just downloaded. So let's find my console. And again, I'm using these shoulder buttons to scroll through these menus way faster. Here it is. And here's all the cheats. So they're all off by default, but I can enable one. I'll do a moon jump. That sounds fun. I'll enable it. And then once you've finished enabling all the cheats you want, you can go up to apply changes and press a and let's see if it worked. Oh yeah, that's a moon jump. All right. In fact, I am still, I'm still in the air, I still haven't come down yet. Come on Donkey Kong, where are you at? Yeah, he's just out of the stratosphere. How long is he going to be up there for? Alright, I think something might've gone wrong. I'm going to try restarting it. Alright, let's try that again. I just restarted moon jump take two. There we go. That's a little better. I mean it really was moon jump though. I mean he literally went to space. Alright, next, let's set up retro achievements. Alright, so let's go to retro achievements.org and let's search for a game. Let's say Sylvania for the NES. So here it is, you can see the classic box R on the side here. And if we scroll down, there are 74 achievements worth 646 points. But okay, how the heck do we set this up? Well, lemme show you first we're going to make a retro achievements account, but I already have an account, so I'll just click sign in and I don't even need to remember my password. Thanks Lan. Now make sure you save your username and password. If you have a password manager like me, then that should be pretty easy for you. But yeah, we're going to use that to connect our retro achievements account to our retro pi. So let's do it real fast. Okay, so back on the Retro Pi. First thing I'm going to do is open up a game. So I'll just do Super Mario World. Alright, now once we're in the game, I'm going to hit the hot key and the top button. So in my case, why to open up the menu. So from this retro arc menu, I'm going to press B to go back and go down to settings. Now I'm going to look for achievements. Here it is, go in there and I'm going to turn on achievements. Now I'll put in my username, I'll just use the keyboard, but you can use the onscreen keyboard if you like. And my password. Okay, not going to lie. I actually forgot my password. Let me look it up on Dashlane. Okay, here it is. And we have a couple more options. So hardcore mode that just disables cheating. So no safe states, no rewinding. So kind of like regular mode if you think about it. And I'm also going to turn on unlock sound just because I like it. Oh, although I don't have any speakers set up here, so we're not going to be able to hear the unlock sound. Oh well. And of course I'm going to go back and go down to configuration file, save current configuration just to make sure none of these settings get deleted. Alright, so now I'm going to go ahead and quit and reboot the game. And we should see something along the lines of, oh, and there it is. Retro achievements logged in as cheese, fruit and Super Mario World. Alright, so we can now let's try and unlock an achievement. Dang, I really wish I could hear this beautiful Super Mario World music, but what can you do? All right, I'm just going to wing it. See how long it takes for me to unlock something. Come on. First dinosaur. Nope. First death. Nope. I can't believe I died on the first bonds I bill. I swear I am good at this game. Okay, you know what editor, you can just take that out. Oh, I died a second time. Alright, get the cameras. We're not just, oh my gosh, okay, there's an achievement to just get a Yoshi. So I'm just going to try and get that one Mom. Boom, achievement unlocked. Alright, now I feel complete. Okay, let's talk about net play. So Chuck and I tried setting this up earlier and it was a complete disaster. Alright. Now I need to set a server password, Chuck, and this is what you're going to use to connect to me, okay? I'm just going to make it real easy. Network Chuck related, I'm just going to do coffee. You would do that? Yeah, no one's going to guess that password, Alex, but that actually it'll get roasted immediately. Anyways. Listen, you can only roast me once per video, Chuck, this is too much. But since then I've gotten it to work and I'm going to show you how to set it up. Then Chuck and I will connect to each other through Netplay and play some games. So with Netplay there's a host and a client. Now it doesn't really matter which is which for us, I was the host and Chuck was the client. But in general I'd say it would probably be a good idea to have the person with more stable internet connection be the host. Now first things first, and this is extremely important, you need to make sure that the host and the clients are all using the latest version of Retro work because if you're not all on the same version, it will not work. So let me show you how to do that. First we're going to go into our retro PI menu and we're going to go down to Retro Pi setup. It's the little retro PI logo here. Alright, now you should see this. So we're just going to go down to update and press a. It says, are you sure you want to update installed packages? Hit yes. Okay, now this will take a while, so I'm going to set this down. I'm going to need some lunch and I'm going to come back to it. Okay, looks like it's finished installing. So I'm going to hit enter. Now I'm going to go down to the bottom option and do perform reboot and I'll choose yes. Alright, so let's go into a game and see if our retro arc has updated. Okay, that's a great sign. Looks like it's updated, but I can double check. So I'm going to hit the hotkey and X. So in my case select X and I'll go back and go down to information. We'll do system information and there we go. Retro arc version one point 18. So as long as we're all on version one point 18, me and my friends should be able to connect through net play perfectly. So how do we actually set up net play? Well, we're going to have to go back to the main menu. So I'm going to hit start and the hotkey button at the same time. And I'm going to back out of this screen and go over to Retro Pi and head in there. Now I'm going to look for the retro arc net play settings. So those should be right down here and press a to go into those. So there's a few options here. Let's go through option one set mode. So you can choose host or client. In my case, I'm the host, so I'll pay host number two. We'll set a port by default. It's 5, 5 4, 3 5. You can change that if you like. Number three, set host IP address. So as host, what I want to do is grab this little external IP number at the top right and send that to the client who's trying to connect to me. And option number four is your net play nickname. So you want to make this identifiable so you can tell each other apart. You can see mines just set to gaming pie B, and then the very bottom save configuration press. Okay, it'll save and then you can exit. And now we're ready to boot up a game. So let's say I want to play Kirby's Dream Course through Net Play. All I need to do is press A as the game is booting up. So let's do it. I'm going to press A to go into the game and then press A as the game's booting up. And now I'll go down to the second to last option. It reads Launch with net play enabled. And I'll press a. And there we go. You'll see you have joined as Player one waiting for client net Play port mapping successful. So I watched Chuck through how to do this. Let me show you what it looks like to set this up as a real life scenario. I'm ready if you are. Totally ready, let's go. Alright, let's set this up. So where are you right now? What are you doing? Are you on your main menu here? Are you on? What do you see? Yeah, so I'm on the Retro Pi main menu. I'm just scrolling through all the different game systems, which is crazy. Beautiful. Alright, so to set up net play, first thing you're going to need to do is decide you're going to need to answer a question. Really, who's going to be the host and who's going to be the client? Oh. I'm not doing anything you're hosting. This is your video, bro. Alright. All right. I'll be the host. I'll be the host either way though, we're both going to want to head over to the retro pi menu. So just keep scrolling through all those game consoles until you see Retro Pi. Alright, I see it. I'm going to press a and get in there. Now you should see an option in this menu called Retro Arc net play. Okay, got it. Now you're going to have to guide my blind hands because this CRT monitor is not telling me anything. Alright, I'll guide you through here. So the first option is asking whether you're the host or the client. Yeah, I want to select client. Beautiful. Alright, and then we'll go down to the second option. This is for the port we're going to use. So by default it's set to 5, 5, 4, 3, 5. You memorized that, huh? We can just try the default port and we don't really have to mess with it unless it doesn't work. Okay, I like it. So let's go down to option three. And this one's really for you. You're going to have to put in my IP address now. No, no. Oh, this'll just be my host address, which I think is auto-populated, so we don't have to worry about that. No, it says set host IP address for client mode. Right now I have it set to literally my IP address for the pie. But this is what's going to let you quickly access me. Oh, does it? Yeah. Yeah. Oh, okay. Drake, I'm the retro pi master here. Okay. Okay. Okay. I'll do it. I'll do it. Do you have a keyboard? I hope? No. Okay. Well can you see numbers? Yeah, I can see numbers. I'm going to zoom in on my monitor cam. This is kind of tiny. So right there you can see my external IP number. Now this is the number I'm giving Chuck so that he can connect to me. You're having trouble reading it? Yeah. I just think, should I put it in right? I'm not even sure. I think I did. I'm going to press start to save that guy. All right. Actually no, I don't do that. Here I go to, okay, and I click okay. Yeah, it looks good. Does it look good? Yeah. Alright, well I hope it is good. So we'll just go to the last option to save everything and head back to our main menu. Okay, I saved it. And I'm going to click exit. Now we've picked what game we want to play. Okay. Okay. What are you feeling? I'm feeling this little hidden gem on the Super Nintendo. It's called Zombies Ate My Neighbors. Ooh. Have you ever heard of. This? Never. Chuck, you're in for a good time. Okay, so Super Nintendo and Zombies Ate My Neighbors. Let's go find. That. When you're booting up your game, you're going to want to press A. So I'll press A to open it and then when it's loading up, I'll press a again. Yeah, couldn't have put it better myself. Okay, cool. I'm going to try that out now. So I'm going to open it and when I see it booting here, I'm going to press A. Okay, cool. So it drop me into a config area. Perfect. I'm going to do the same thing. And since I'm the host, I'm going to ask you to wait for a second while I get mine set up. Okay. Alright. Now all I'm going to do is go down to option number. What does that say? Oh, it's not numbers, it's letters. Oh, can I just press, wait, it says Z. Can I just press Z? And then this will just work. Don't, I'll just, I'll just go down to it. That's just easier. People aren't going to have keyboards set up to their retro pie. So from this config menu, I'm just going to go all the way down here to launch with Net Play enabled. And that should start my net play host. Alright, it says Waiting for client, it's your turn. Chuck and I should do the same thing, right? So that's second from last option. Second to last option. Okay. Okay, so I'll click that. I see you. Yeah, let's do. It. Alright. I don't know who's left and who's right. I am guessing that player. One left. Alright. I'm the guy I think. Dang it. There we. Go. I don't think I can kill the teacher, unfortunately. What the hell is that? I have no idea there's a child. Oh my gosh. Yeah, let's find the zombies. Oh, there's one. Here we go. Got em. Oh my gosh, this game's kind of violent. I feel like Rick Grimes. Ah crap. It got me. I'm out. You have 197 shots left. What were you doing? What were you shooting. At? Did I just spam? Protect me, Chuck. Can we get in those grapes? No, what's the pipe? Oh, you can swim. That is not a pipe. That is a nuclear waste. Tub. Is this safe to be swimming in? I don't feel like this is safe. We might turn into zombies ourselves. Hey. I found a key. Okay. Alright. Where's that. Door at? I think it was over here. Yeah, let's go. Oh yeah, we got in. There's Wow. Wonderful. There's a dancing baby in here. Is that a man? I can't tell. What is this for? I don't think we got anything out of this. Oh, you just killed the. Baby. I think I collected the baby. I just kidnapped that kid. Hey, come collect this baby. Oh no, I got it. Let's, why don't we try some street fighter little fighting game you Street Fighter two. Yeah, let's go. I don't think I ever played that one. Actually. I am hosting. All right, I'm jumping in now I. See you. Perfect. All right, perfect. We're in, dude. This is so cool. Two different pies. So sick. Two different networks, two different pies. Oh yeah, this is definitely two player. Alright, I'm going to be, I'm going to be my guy Ken. I'm. Going to be Sailor Moon. AKA Chun Lee. Oh yeah. Oh man. Learn the controls real quick. See if I can do any combos on you. Oh, what the. Heck? You got to do a little closer than that. I'm just matching. Buttons. Spamming buttons. Yeah. Oh, what was that? I don't know how I did that, but I really want to do it again. Oh, there we go. Whoa. I don't know any combos yet. All right. What's your combo? What are you doing? What are you doing? We ran out of time. Well who. Won? And I won by default. Dang it. Sweet. I'm going to be this guy. He looks like he's kind of out of place. Just this grotesque monster. I'm going to be Ken. How can I not be Ken? Oh. My gosh, dad, dude. Scary. This looks like an even match. I love these kick moves. I'm so agile. I'm just going to punch you in the nuts every time you come on your ear. Wow, that is a terrible victory animation. I have to be honest. Oh my gosh. Oh yeah. Take. It. I can't do anything. It. Oh, time over. I win by default. What's up, network Truckers. I have some super exciting news for all of our Network Truck Academy members. We're posting two exclusive bonus videos where we show you how to set up even more retro pi goodness. And one of them I show you how to access your retro pi from your web browser pretty sick. And in the other, we'll set up a custom relay server for play that lets you use net play without having to deal with UPNP or any other router shenanigans you might run into. It's a ton of fun. And guys, I want to see your retro PI set up. So go to the Network Check Academy community and share it with me. It's free to sign up and I will personally respond to everyone who sends me a photo of their retro PI up and running. I might regret saying that. So what are you waiting for? Get to the academy.
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Channel: NetworkChuck
Views: 245,641
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: RetroPie setup, RetroPie guide, RetroPie tutorial, Retro gaming setup, Raspberry Pi gaming, EmulationStation, RetroPie emulators, Classic gaming, RetroPie configuration, Installing RetroPie, Raspberry Pi 4 gaming, RetroArch, RetroPie ROMs, Retro gaming tutorial, RetroPie controller, RetroPie performance, RetroPie optimization, RetroPie themes, RetroPie skins, RetroPie community, RetroPie update, RetroPie Arcade, Multi-console setup, RetroPie beginner, RetroPie advanced
Id: AaseHnf0k2o
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 33min 3sec (1983 seconds)
Published: Tue Jun 11 2024
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