From PlayStation Portable to Nintendo 8-Bit Simulator

From PlayStation Portable to Nintendo 8-Bit Simulator

William Lv12

From PlayStation Portable to Nintendo 8-Bit Simulator

The Sony PSP is a legendary piece of gaming hardware. What makes it even more amazing are the things you can do to modify it and get more out of it.

Emulators are a great way to get the most out of your old PSP as besides playing PSP titles natively, Game Boy games run especially well on the PSP, so it’s the perfect platform to emulate.

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The Sony PSP Is a Great Platform for Emulation

The Sony PlayStation Portable is often thought of as being ahead of its time. It had a great form factor, decently powerful internals, and could be a whole media center in a tiny package. Eventhe PS Vita failed and couldn’t live up to the PSP.

Since it is so much more powerful than previous-generation hardware, the PSP could easily emulate platforms like all the Game Boy versions, Nintendo 64, SNES, GameCube, and even some PS1 and PS2 games.

PSP emulating GameBoy games

Image Credit: Jhet Borja

You can buy something like theRetroid Pocket 3+ for $149, but used PSPs are quite abundant, and old units could easily be had for a small price. Granted, the Pocket 3+ is quite powerful and can play demanding 3D PS2 games that the PSP can’t.

If you have an old PSP or can get your hands on one for a low price, emulation is a great way to make the most of it and play multiple retro platforms on one convenient handheld. While there aregreat emulators on Android , a physical device just makes the experience so much better.

How to Emulate Game Boy Games on Your PSP

In this article, we’re going to be focusing on Game Boy emulation, as it’s one of the easiest platforms to get running on a PSP. Many of these steps will still apply for other platforms as the program we’ll be using has many platforms built in already. Let’s get to turning your PSP into a Game Boy.

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Disclaimer

Installing custom firmware is not jailbreaking. However, we do not condone piracy and we do not encourage you to illegally access copyrighted content such as ROMs. Please use rips and backups of games you already own and do not use redistributed copyrighted content from the internet.

Step 1: Download Custom Firmware and Set Up Your PSP

Before we delve further into this step, you’re going to need to update your PSP version 6.61. Updating your PSP is outside the scope of this article, but updating your PSP follows the same steps as installing custom firmware. You can also quickly watch how to update your PSP in the video above.

Downloading PSP custom firmware

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Firstly, head to thePSPunk website and go to the tab of your PSP model. You’ll want to download the6.61 Pro C2 and theInfinity v2.0.3 files.

We can’t just carelessly paste those downloaded files into your PSP. PSPs rely on a folder structure system and can’t recognize files just because they’re in the Memory Stick.

Complete folder structure for PSP update

For Infinity, follow this folder structure: PSP/GAME/UPDATE. If the UPDATE folder already exists, skip this step.

Moving Infinity update file into PSP UPDATE folder

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Inside theUPDATE folder, transfer theEBOOT.PBP file from the Infinity ZIP file like in the image above. Make sure to choose the file inside thepspgo folder if you have a PSP GO. Otherwise, choose the file in thestandard folder.

Moving custom firmware folder into PSP GAME folder

Go back one tier in the folder structure into theGAME folder and transfer thePROUPDATE folder into it.

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Step 2: Install Infinity and Pro C2 Firmware Into Your PSP

Pro C2 is the custom firmware, and Infinity helps the firmware stay persistently so you don’t have to install the firmware every time you reboot your PSP. Since these two go together and follow similar steps, we’ll just put them into one section.

Infinity 2 thumbnail on PSP

We’ll start with Infinity first; turn your PSP on and head toGame > Memory Stick . Look for the Infinity 2 thumbnail and select it.

Once you open Infinity, you’ll need to install it by pressingX on your PSP. After the installation completes, you’ll then be asked to reboot your PSP.

Pro-C thumbnail on PSP

After rebooting your PSP, we can now install the custom firmware. To do this, head toGame on your PSP again and select the Pro C2 thumbnail.

PRO-C installation screen on PSP

After launching it, you’ll see small text on the upper left of your PSP. All you need to do now is pressX to execute the installation of the firmware. After installation, pressX again to reboot your PSP and launch the custom firmware.

Step 3: Make the PSP Custom Firmware Persistent

Now that you’re in the custom firmware, you’ll need to make it persistent with Infinity. If you don’t, rebooting your PSP will revert it back to official firmware.

PRO CFW selected in Infinity

To make the custom firmware permanent, open up Infinity. With Infinity open, press left on your D-Pad. SelectPRO CFW by Coldbird . You’ll know if you’ve selected it once you see an asterisk beside the text.

Press right on your D-Pad to go back to the main Infinity screen and press theHome button on your PSP to exit.

PSP system version with Pro-C and Infinity

You can check if the custom firmware is installed by going toSettings > System Settings > System Information . You should see an infinity symbol next to the version number of your system software.

Step 4: Set Up RetroArch

Now that you’ve got custom firmware installed on your PSP, you can now start installing the emulator. In our case, we’re going to use RetroArch, as it’s easy to download and get running.

RetroArch PSP download page

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Firstly, head to theRetroArch Downloads page . Scroll down until you find the PSP emulator and click onDownload .

Extracting retroarch folder into PSP GAME folder

Once you’ve downloaded RetroArch, plug your PSP in and open the RetroArch ZIP file and transfer theretroarch folder into thePSP/GAME folder in your PSP.

RetroArch main menu with Quit RetroArch highlighted

Unplug your PSP and on it, head toGame > Memory Stick . You should see the RetroArch thumbnail added. Run RetroArch so it creates new folders in your PSP. These new folders are where you place your games, emulator cores, configs, etc. You can now quit RetroArch and plug it back into your computer to add your legally obtained games.

RetroArch Downloads highlighted

When moving games to your PSP for RetroArch to run, place it in the PSP/RETROARCH/DOWNLOADS folder and you should see them in the Downloads when selectingLoad Content RetroArch on your PSP.

An Old Platform to Play Older Platforms

The first PSP was released in 2004, but it was way ahead of its time. The fact that it can play multiple retro platforms despite being considered retro itself is quite impressive.

You can get a used PSP for cheap and be able to play PSP games natively on it, but you can also enjoy classic 2D games from other platforms with ease. Just avoid demanding 3D games as it starts to struggle with those.

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  • Title: From PlayStation Portable to Nintendo 8-Bit Simulator
  • Author: William
  • Created at : 2024-10-11 06:31:21
  • Updated at : 2024-10-12 23:28:30
  • Link: https://games-able.techidaily.com/from-playstation-portable-to-nintendo-8-bit-simulator/
  • License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.