
Commodore 64 gaming is a world unto itself, and I thought pulling some of that into the ds106tv stream would be a lot of fun but hit an early snag with the video signal. I have a ton of games for the c128d (almost all played in the C64 mode of that system) and they’re a total blast to play and the graphics age quite well.
OPEN EMU EMULATOR MAC GAMES MAC
the c128d) pulled into my Mac so that I could stream the gameplay. So, more on the MAME/RetroPie front, but the big win on this machine is having my Xbox game controller hooked up to the Pi so that it controls everything, no need for a keyboard or mouse after the initial setup, and this video was a great play-by-play of the installation process:įinally, I returned to another project I spent several hours on earlier in the week, namely trying to figure out what I needed to use the Elgato video capture card to get the video and sound from a real, live Commodore 128d (a.k.a.
OPEN EMU EMULATOR MAC GAMES PRO
So, I have RetroPie running, and it is slick, but the final piece will be getting the gofanco HDMI to USB 3 convertor an HDMI to RCA covertor so that I can bring it into my Macbook Pro using the Elgato video capture card and play the classics fullscreen on my second monitor for streaming to ds106tv. I explored the VNC screen sharing option (as well the the TightVNCserver option) in tandem with the VNC Viewer for the Mac, but turns out that audio does not work which was a dealbreaker for me.

Using your 2015 Macbook Pro as a monitor for a Raspberry is not that easy, the HDMI cable is output only. But I still wanted to get those classic arcade games through MAME into my Macbook Pro as an input so I can stream the gameplay for ds106tv. I had the Raspberry Pi loading RetroPie cleanly, and not only to my MAME roms work cleanly, but I could also play my Atari 2600 roms given RetroPie can emulate numerous systems,* much like OpenEMU. I was thrilled that it worked, but the itch I was trying to scratch was still eluding me. During my searches I saw that several folks were running something called RetroPie for MAME, and given I have a Raspberry Pi 3, Model B+ hanging around I decided to take a left turn at Albuquerque and get that up and running on Saturday. What’s more, streaming from a window on OBS does a number on frame rates. There may be a command for forcing MAME to open in a window on the Mac, but I haven’t found it yet. This meant I needed another option, and while I played with a couple of Mac options like ChoccyHobnob, I knew they wouldn’t work for me because I wanted to run MAME in a separate window and these options were all command line which took over my screen when played. I think Atari 5200 is next for me 🙂 If you are interested, this guide was quite useful in getting me up and running with openEMU: “Running the MAME Arcade Emulator on Mac OSX.”īut there was one issue with OpenEMU, at least for the Mac, that led me down the RetroPie path: MAME roms (or the classic arcade games that Reclaim Arcade is all about) were not stable. It’s nice because I can emulate just about any game on any old school console.

I found them and then went on a search for the best emulator out there now, and that is how I discovered OpenEMU. This led me to digging up a bunch of roms I had for the z26 Atari emulator on an old storage disk. It was fun, and while there are some good games on the Flashback-Adventure, Asteroids, Haunted House, etc.-I quickly wanted access to a number of other Atari games I had as a kid (not to mention the 150+ we have at Reclaim Video in Freddy). It worked, I could pull in the Atari Flashback and both play and stream it fullscreen from a second monitor. It was a quick way to test if I could use the Elgato video capture card I had purchased for archiving VHS tapes to bring in the card as an input for OBS on ds106tv.

The discovery of OpenEMU was born of my small experiments on to create a living room like space wherein I play some old school Atari 2600 games on the Atari Flashback I picked up at Christmas a few years back. I figure I might need something to reference 10 years from now when I decide to get into classic game emulation yet again 🙂

So, I’ll use this post as a way to collect some of my links and learning thus far to try and capture the road that got me here as the trees of memory already begin to blur the path. I am quickly realizing why ds106radio and ds106tv is good for me, it pushes me to go down rabbit holes I never even dreamed existed. Update: Thanks to Tim’s comment I was able to find a solution that will actually work and is significantly cheaper for capturing the Retropie output on the Mac for streaming.
