For a while now I’ve wanted to pick up a hacked SNES or Raspberry Pi in a small SNES case to emulate my favorite games on my TV. It’s both for me, and for my daughter (5) who has successfully played games like Spyro Reignited with little help from me. I think SNES would be an incredible entry point for her. That said, after some digging it looks like a Gen2 Amazon Firestick may be the better option?
Just hoping to get some advice on the simplest, most straight-forward option for me to play SNES ROMs on my smart TV, with support for two controllers. I’m even open to buying a complete package with the work already done for me, so long as I can add ROMs of my choice to it. I just don’t know where to get something like that, and everything I’ve searched looks a little overwhelming to put together. I’m fairly tech-savvy, but I don’t know that I’m up to the task of physically assembling devices and circuit boards like some of these kits seem to require.
Your advice is greatly appreciated!
Raspberry Pis are not difficult to tinker with. Don’t let your intimidation stop you from trying to assembly one the way you want. Just don’t be walking around on a carpet before touching it and it’ll be okay. The circuit boards can slip out of your hand and land on the table and be just fine.
Get a RPi5 4gb, a case with a fan that connects with the standard fan pinout (for simplicity. No special scripts needed), and put Batocera on it. It’s a very easy to use retro gaming software.
The cool thing about a small SBC like a RPi is that you can try different operating systems out without loosing your old data by simply swapping the micro SD card with a different thing, then just go back and it’ll boot like nothing ever changed. You’ll learn a lot and not be intimidated anymore.
If you go this route you’re welcome to DM me for help setting it up.
I appreciate it. I’m digging for a comprehensive step-by-step guide of some sort, but having someone available to contact with specifics will be super helpful. It doesn’t look much different than building a PC, which I’ve done many, many times.