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The Pi-Pocket as it has been named by Travis is capable of playing Gameboy, NES, Sega Master System, Game Gear games. As well as popular ported Linux games such as Doom and Duke Nukem, thanks to ...
This DIY project by Travis Brown shows you how to remove the guts from your old Game Boy Pocket (a smaller Game Boy variant) and stuff in an SD card, a battery, and a Raspberry Pi board.
There are hundreds – perhaps thousands – of builds out there on the Internet that put a Raspberry Pi in an enclosure with buttons meant solely for running emulators for old games. This … ...
We've seen plenty of ways to use a Raspberry Pi as a retro game center, but if you really want to do it right, XodusTech shows how to build that game console into a Game Boy.
What do you do with a broken Gameboy, a 3″ LCD, a pile of wires, a USB SNES controller, a 32gb SD card, and a Raspberry Pi? You make a pocket emulator, of course! [Anton] decided he wanted to ...
The Pi Boy Portable build is inspired by a combination of custom eye-boggling inventions including adafruit's DIY Raspberry Pi Gameboy and Carasibana's Super Game PiSP, a PSP-shaped SNES retro ...
The Super Pi Boy project uses a Model B Raspberry Pi, broken Game Boy, printed circuit board (PCB) for controls, some new buttons, a 3.5-inch LCD screen, and a tiny audio amplifier.
In the spirit of mods that require soldering irons and hot glue guns and bucket-loads of patience, meet the “Super Mega Ultra Pi Boy 64,” a Game Boy shell with a Raspberry Pi soul.
It allows you to place your Raspberry Pi Zero (or Zero W) inside an authentic-looking replica of the Game Boy, complete with a colour screen.
This device may look like a classic Game Boy, but it's actually powered by a Raspberry Pi Zero. YouTuber wermy placed a Raspberry Pie Zero inside an original Game Boy, adding a 3.5 inch composite ...
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