This past October, Dolphin turned 20 years old since its initial release to the public as an experimental GameCube emulator. It's been a long ride, with twists and turns. I don't know if anyone back in 2003 expected Dolphin not only to still be under active development 20 years later, but to also support the GameCube's successor in the Wii.

For future users, I found a workaround.


Since the emulator wants to add the drive letter to the front of whatever you put in the M3U file, just put the full path of the rvz file minus the drive letter in each entry and it works. For example.


Baten Kaitos Origins is in the location:

"F:\LaunchBox\Games\Nintendo GameCube\B\Baten Kaitos Origins (USA)"


Even though the rvz files are in the same folder as the m3u, you put the entry down as:

\LaunchBox\Games\Nintendo GameCube\B\Baten Kaitos Origins (USA)\Baten Kaitos Origins (USA) (Disc 1).rvz

\LaunchBox\Games\Nintendo GameCube\B\Baten Kaitos Origins (USA)\Baten Kaitos Origins (USA) (Disc 2).rvz


That way it adds the F: at the front anyways and the emulator loads it, and allows you to move it to any drive you want and it will boot so long as you put the Launchbox folder a top directory on that drive.


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I did some searching on the internet and found that there is an issue with this game displaying the fonts but apparently a fix for the dolphin emulator is to install the Gamecube bios under the following directory (C:\Users#NAMEHERE#\Documents\Dolphin Emulator\GC\USA, but what is the equivalent path in retroarch?

Dolphin Emulator is a powerful Nintendo Wii and GameCube emulator, completely free and open source, which allows you to enjoy almost the entire catalog for these two consoles on Android devices. Like the versions for desktop computers (Windows, Linux, and Mac), the emulator will allow you to enjoy many improvements, both graphically and in terms of general features.

One of the most striking improvements of Dolphin Emulator is its wide range of resolutions. Depending on the size and density of your device's screen, you can enjoy resolutions ranging from 720p to 2K or even 4K. The emulator also offers many graphic configuration options that will allow you to customize and improve your experience: V-Sync, Shaders, Anti-Aliasing, post-processing effects, and so on. All this means, in short, that you will be able to enjoy your games as they looked on their original consoles, but you will also be able to improve them to make them look much better. The decision, in the end, is yours.

Configuring the visuals of Dolphin Emulator is a relatively simple process, but it can be quite time-consuming if you want to get the most out of your Android device. The good thing? The emulator is so scalable and offers so many options that, regardless of your terminal, you will most likely be able to play almost all GameCube or Wii titles. With a high-end device, you will get higher resolutions and better performance, but even with mid-range devices, you can run games at some of the more modest resolutions.

Back in the day, playing with friends on the same console was the only way to share the experience, but thanks to Dolphin Emulator you can now also do it over the Internet. Thanks to the Netplay function, you can play any GameCube or Wii title with your friends, even if everyone is in their own home or even on the subway. The only requirements are that all players have the game in question on their list, have a high-speed Internet connection, and are using the emulator's same version. If you meet all these requirements, you can enjoy multiplayer like never before.

Dolphin Emulator is, without any doubt, the definitive emulator for Wii and GameCube. In addition, it is a project in constant development, as it has been receiving almost daily updates since its first version was released in 2003, so if a particular game does not work properly with one version, the next update may fix that particular problem. As if all this were not enough, there are many homebrew ROMs totally free, which you can play legally without any problems.

Yes, Dolphin Emulator is free. The first version of the emulator, in 2003, had a proprietary license. In 2008, however, Dolphin Emulator was moved to a GPLv2 license, and in 2013 it was relicensed with GPLv2+.

Dolphin is an emulator for two recent Nintendo video game consoles: the GameCube and the Wii. It allows PC gamers to enjoy games for these two consoles in full HD (1080p) with several enhancements: compatibility with all PC controllers, turbo speed, networked multiplayer, and even more!

So I am having an issue here after having to reinstall Zorin. Dolphin emulator doesn't seem to want to detect my Wii remotes. I know it was working out of the box on the last install and worked perfectly at that. But this time, no.

I'm using the Mayflash Dolphinbar and it's worked fine for years. I can also set it to desktop mode and the wiimotes control that just fine. It's just dolphin itself that is giving me a hard time. Not sure why it worked first try before but not now.

What am I missing?

It's in it's 4th revision, i'd hardly say its "trash" now. I usually don't play the games on emulators any higher than 720p as it's enough for me. They run at 60FPS with full Anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering. Obviously it being an emulator most of the time settings need to be changed depending on the game you are playing as some settings make other games crash or go weird.

Dolphin is an open-source emulator for the Nintendo GameCube and Wii with support for Microsoft Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, and Android. Dolphin was the first emulator to boot GameCube and later Wii games, and now boasts compatibility with most titles for those game systems. With a huge community of developers and users around the world, Dolphin continues to gain compatibility, performance, and new features to this day.

With support for 97% of the Wii/GameCube library, the Dolphin emulator is easily one of the best emulators available today. All Wii classics run well on the emulator. That includes Super Smash Bros Melee, Super Mario Galaxy, Metriod Prime, and all Wii/GameCube Legend of Zelda titles.

I like to report this issue: In Dolphin emulator when I try to use Vulkan as backend the emulator just close without any error message even in log file. I thinked that the problem was the emulator, but is not the case aparently because, in Android Studio, when I try to launch my AVD devices pop up an error:

ProblemasAndroidStudio2539726 24.2 KB

When utilizing the dolphin emulator to emulate wii/gamecube commercial games and homebrew, I am getting graphical corruption on screen through a horizontal rapidly moving black bar. A short clip of the issue is attached. The issue only happens with the Vulkan backend and is not present on other hardware I have tested (RADV MESA drivers, lNTEL MESA drivers, AMD/Intel Windows gpu drivers, and r32.3.1 on Tegra-X1. The issue is independent of vsync being enabled or disabled. 17dc91bb1f

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