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RetroPie allows you to turn your Raspberry Pi, ODroid C1/C2, or PC into a retro-gaming machine. It builds upon Raspbian, EmulationStation, RetroArch and many other projects to enable you to play your favourite Arcade, home-console, and classic PC games with the minimum set-up.
Pre-made images for the Raspberry Pi. The latest pre-made image of RetroPie is v4.8. Released March 14, 2022. Contributions to the project are appreciated, so if you would like to support us with a donation you can do so here. Donate.
This page is for people just getting started on RetroPie. The easiest way to install RetroPie is the SD image which is a ready to go system built upon top of the Raspberry Pi OS - this is the method described in the following guide. Alternatively, advanced users can install RetroPie manually.
It is quite simple to put together the hardware you need to get RetroPie up and running. You can buy the parts separately or can buy affordable kits that contain the various components you need – e.g. the Canakit, or a kit from The Pi Hut, or Pimoroni (see below).
You can get a list of all the packages in RetroPie and what systems they will run on via https://retropie.org.uk/stats/pkgflags/. All pixel consoles hand drawn by the talented Rookervik – Please give proper attribution if you use the console images.
An overview of all the computer / console systems supported by the emulators included with RetroPie.
Getting Started. First Installation. WiFi. Controller Configuration (RetroArch) Transferring games (ROMs) Scraping Games. Runcommand. Getting the right Arcade ROMs. Updating RetroPie.
The RetroPie 4.8 images are built on the latest version of the Raspberry Pi OS Lite Buster (which is now their legacy release). This image supports the latest Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W and recent Raspberry Pi 4 boards that require a newer firmware than is available on the RetroPie 4.7.1 image.
This guide is a manual process to recreate the stock SD image RetroPie released on the RetroPie Website for the Raspberry Pi. If you aren't comfortable with the terminal you would be wise to just use the RetroPie SD image provided.
The GUI/ emulation station you can head into retropie menu and select setup, that runs the script that you can use to install other retroarch cores and emulators you want