![]() ![]() For example, back out of the quick menu, then go to Settings > Video and turn RGA scaling to ON. Press your hotkey to get back to the RetroArch menu (元 + R3 is default), then go into the settings and configure it how you’d like. Next, load a game either through RetroArch itself, or through the EmuELEC menu. “Save core overrides” (RetroArch): First, before you load any game or core, go to RetroArch Settings > Video and make sure that Bilinear Filtering and RGA Scaling is set to off.Now, you will have the option to save overrides that are specific to that core or game (and the content directory option also works). Back out to the Main Menu (on the far left) and select Configuration File > Save Current Configuration. Scroll down until you find “Show Save Core Overrides”, then turn that ON, as well as “Save Game Overrides”. Once you’re in RetroArch, go to Settings > User Interface > Menu Item Visibility > Quick Menu. ![]() Or you can select “Close Content” in the Quick Menu when you have a game loaded in RetroArch. You can do this by pressing START while in EmuELEC to get to the EmuELEC main menu, then select Quit > Start RetroArch. But in order to make EmuELEC more simple, it appears the developer hid the override settings on the device, so we need to set that up. Long story short: RetroArch’s “override” settings are more robust than what you’ll find in EmuELEC, and will override your EmuELEC settings anyway. For more information on override hierarchy, check out this guide from RetroArch themselves. For example, Star Fox plays best on the SNES 9x 2010 core, but you probably don’t want to use that core for every SNES game. Finally, you can also override game settings, so that specific games have their own settings. You can also override content directories, which is handy if you have a core (like Picodrive) that emulates multiple systems, but you only want one system to have specific settings - this option will save a whole directory (like “Sega Genesis”) and not touch the other directories that use the same core (Sega 32X, Game Gear, etc). To override core settings means you can set up settings for an entire core (say, FCEUMM for the NES) and those settings will be persistent for every game that launches with that core, no matter how the EmuELEC settings are configured. These are kind of confusing, but essential if you want the best settings, so let’s discuss for a moment. This is done via the “override” settings. The other three settings are done in RetroArch, which is the backend system that runs most of the emulators (called “cores”) on the RG351P. To do so, navigate to the game you want to adjust, then press SELECT and go into the “Advanced Games Options” menu and make your adjustments there - they will save only for that game. “Advanced Game Options” (EmuELEC): You can also adjust settings by game.You can also get to this settings menu by hovering over a game and then pressing SELECT and selecting “Advance System Options”. This is helpful if you want to tweak most of your system’s settings, but it doesn’t cover everything (see #4 below). ![]() This allows you to make the same changes as found in the “Games Settings” menu but by SYSTEM (NES, SNES, etc), as well as to choose which emulator (core). This setting is found in the “Games Settings” menu.
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