For all those who feared their Game Boy days would be but a memory, worry no more!The Game Boy may be dead, but with this packyou#39;ll have a chance to revive it. We#39;ve collected all the rightparts so you can assemble the guts of your very own DIY GameGRRL - a portable Raspberry Pi running MAME and NES emulators.
This is version 2.0! We#39;ve updated this project for the Raspberry Pi 2 or 3 with more buttons (D-Pad, A,B,X,Y,L,R, pause and start), and four extra buttons on the PiTFT.
This portable handheld game emulation station is called the PiGRRL and it#39;s powered by aRaspberry Pi 2 Model Band aPiTFT display. You#39;ll haveto do all the 3D printing, assembly, and installation yourself to get gaming, butour learn guidewill help you getthrough theprocess.
This PiGRRL pack has just about everything you need to make this project EXCEPT the Raspberry Pi, case, battery, wires and hardware, and hand tools for soldering, cutting, etc. You will need to 3D print your own case - but check out our3D printing guidefor the pack so you or your friend can 3D print an enclosure. You need a ~2500mAh lipoly battery and we only guarantee that it will work with our batteries. Using the wrong polarity or chemistry battery can destroy your PiGrrl project.
With this update, we really wanted to make it easier to build. We#39;ve dramatically cut the build time in half by making a custom gamepad PCB. Justsolderin the buttons and an IDC box header to the gamepad PCB - No more tedious button wiring! We also sell just the PCB on it#39;s own.
You will also need to solder together the parts so many hand tools and other small parts such as silicone wires, screws or blue tack are required.Please read through the tutorial so you can see what else is needed to complete this project!
Please note this is a medium-difficulty project that uses many Maker skills such as soldering, 3D printing and installing Linux! The PiGRRL2 is a fun build but it is a DIY project, it will not have perfect audio/video/emulation capabilities.