

LYNX BOOT.IMG ATARI FULL
Feel free to steal these configs:Įmulation Station needs two things to look its best: boxart for each game, and a ‘gamelist.xml’ full of metadata for each system. I’ve got two controllers (from the excellent 8Bitdo) and I had to do this for both of them. Then control-C outta there, and put the proper ones in your cfg file. Tap every button and write down their values. To find out the correct button numbers, run Most or all of these numbers are probably wrong in this cfg if you’re having trouble. Every button on the controller has a number.
LYNX BOOT.IMG ATARI BLUETOOTH
Just pairing with Bluetooth isn’t enough.)Įvery action in the cfg is assigned to a button. (Remember, these CFGs aren’t created until you first set them up within Emulation Station. Open up /opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch-joypadsįind the name of the joypad you want to fix, and edit its. What that means is that some (or none) of the buttons will work within emulators. The Emulation Station setup process will assign buttons that don’t even exist on the controllers to their profiles within Retroarch emulators.

Some controllers get set up fine, and some are all kinds of wrong. This does two things – it lets you control Emulation Station with this controller, and also sets up a default config for the Retroarch emulators (within /opt/retropie/configs/all/retroarch-joypads/), so your controller should work automatically in all of them.Įxcept this second part? It often screws it up pretty badly. Now configure its buttons within Emulation Station. Pair and connect your controller with Bluetooth from the Bluetooth menu. If your controller is physically connected or is Bluetooth paired (and wirelessly connected) the issue is improperly mapped joypad buttons.
