Upgrade Your Old Gameboy/Gameboy Color With Raspberry Pi

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hackinformer
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Upgrade Your Old Gameboy/Gameboy Color With Raspberry Pi

Post by hackinformer » Fri Oct 10, 2014 6:40 pm

Image
Picture of Gameboy LCD+Raspi Upgrade
Hi all! After being a long-time browser of this site I decided it was time to publish my first Instructable. I'm very much into all things retro-gaming. I've built a full-size virtual pinball running Hyperspin which may well be my next Instructable. I'm also in the process of upgrading an early 90's Final Lap driving cabinet to be a multi-game machine.

Here I will show how I gutted an old non-working Nintendo Gameboy original, and fitted these parts instead:

- 3.5" 320x240 LCD with driver PCB

- Raspberry Pi (Model A)

- custom built button PCB

- 1x 18650 Li-Ion cell

- USB Li-Ion charger board

- 3.7V to 5V DC-DC converter board

- stereo audio amp board

- stereo speakers

I've seen other Instructables doing a similar thing, but I set myself a few challenges and desired features of my build which include:

- Fitting the Pi with little or (ideally) no modification

- Have the Pi's USB port and HDMI port remain accessible

- Have the SD card hidden away but also easily accessible

- Retain analogue control of volume

- Retain normal functions of all front buttons, also make it easy to add buttons if the need arises

- Upgrade sound with internal stereo speakers

- Have major components unpluggable (ie. not have all things hard-wired to each other)

- Retain some kind of visible power LED and charge status LEDs

- Have the Gameboy case fit back together cleanly but very securely

- Achieve a good run-time per charge, around 2hrs+

In the end I think I achieved all these goals. Initially I wanted to fit 2x Li-Ion cells but there just wasn't enough room for that 2nd cell.

I had enough experience with Raspian/Raspbmc to know how to get the Pi up and running with RetroPie. I was new to EmulationStation though. I also had not previously dealt with the GPIO pins on a Pi. But I soon discovered how useful these pins are and that it would be possible to control not only the games but also navigate EmulationStation menus as well. Each button grounds a certain GPIO pin, then software makes that action produce a keystroke, as defined in a config file.

Anyway, on with the mod!

source: http://www.instructables.com
Last edited by hackinformer on Fri Oct 10, 2014 6:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Freakler
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RE: Upgrade Your Old Gameboy/Gameboy Color With Raspberry Pi

Post by Freakler » Sat Oct 11, 2014 8:57 am

Still need to finish mine.. someday. :D
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m6mb3rtx
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RE: Upgrade Your Old Gameboy/Gameboy Color With Raspberry Pi

Post by m6mb3rtx » Thu Oct 29, 2015 1:01 pm

Very nice tutorial, but instead of disassemble an old gameboy you should try do it with those replacement shells

Image


Replacement Shell GBC - EBAY
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