Do you wish you could browse a massive collection of retro games from your couch, without having to connect a bunch of systems or cobble together various emulators? RetroArch makes it possible. This all-in-one emulation station can run almost any retro game imaginable, and works on Windows, Mac, and Linux computers. RetroArch is awesome, but it’s a little tricky to set up. Don’t panic, though, because it’s far from impossible. Here’s how to set up RetroArch on your home theater PC, or any other computer, so you can emulate all your favorite retro games in one fell swoop. We’ve shown you, and those tools still work. RetroArch makes things easier by putting all your games in the same place, and giving you a couch-ready interface for browsing your collection. Whether you’re a Nintendo, PlayStation, Sega, or even DOS fanatic, you can add your favorites to one unified menu. Step One: Download RetroArch Head to the, then click the “Downloads” link in the top-right menu. Here you’ll find the latest release for your platform. For example, if you’re a Windows user, click the “Windows” folder. Browse and you’ll find a 7-Zip archive containing Retroarch. You’ll need to if you haven’t already, in order to open the archive. Drag the contents of this archive to a folder, and put that folder anywhere you’d like. I put mine in “D: Retroarch”, but it’s up to you. Build FastCube into your applications created in Delphi or Lazarus. FastCube usage for report building does not require a programmer's high skill level. Fastreport lazarus rarbg proxy. To know on making the Ultimate Emulator System. The Ultimate Emulator System Using HyperSpin. HyperSpin v1.0 Realeases>HyperSpin>HyperSpin Install. Automatically download emulators. Sign in to follow this. Automatically download emulators (from HyperLaunchHQ / modules?). Ultimate HyperSpin Guru. To launch RetroArch, simply double-click “retroarch.exe”. Step Two: Configure Your Controllers The RetroArch user interface can be overwhelming at first, throwing you directly into a menu of configuration options. Don’t worry: it’s simpler than it looks. The first thing you need to know is your mouse is not useful here. Click wherever you want, nothing is going to happen. Instead, browse the menu using your arrow keys. Up and down scrolls through the list; right and left jumps from one menu to another, indicated by the icons at the top of the screen. “Enter” lets you select a menu item, “Backspace” lets you jump back a level. Of course, if you want to browse your collection from the couch with a gamepad, the first thing you’re going to want to do is set up your controller to work with RetroArch. In our tests, an Xbox 360 controller worked out-of-the-box, but if your controller isn’t working to browse the menu–or you want to configure the buttons differently–we can change that. With your keyboard, head to the Settings menu, which is represented at the top of the screen by two gears. Scroll down to “Input”, then hit Enter. Now scroll down to “Input User 1 Binds”, and scroll down to “User 1 Bind All”. ![]() Click that and you can map buttons to your gamepad. The RetroArch bindings work across all emulators, and are designed to consistently mimic the gamepads that came with the appropriate systems. You should, ideally, configure your joystick so that the buttons line up with those in this image: Do that, and most games should play exactly the way you remember, though you can configure things differently if you prefer. Once this is set up, you can navigate the RetroArch menus using only your gamepad, so put the keyboard away if you don’t want it. If you’re setting up a multiplayer rig, repeat this process for all of your controllers. It will all be worth it, I promise.
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АвторНапишите что-нибудь о себе. Не надо ничего особенного, просто общие данные. Архивы
Март 2019
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