

I could have put an emulator on my laptop and plugged away, but I wanted something a little more like what I remember: an old CRT screen and a wired controller. Not coincidentally, I also had some time to kill. (It was things like this that led to me being voted “He Goes Here?” in my high-school yearbook.) Back at home over the holidays, finding myself reverting to teenagerhood, I had an itch to play Tactics again, because there’s nothing more life-affirming than someone in their 30s trying to re-create their youth.


One of the better winters I spent as a teenager was playing the classic 1998 PlayStation game Final Fantasy Tactics and listening to Built to Spill’s There’s Nothing Wrong With Love on endless repeat. When you restart, RetroPie will automatically start on the boot-there's no need to run a command anymore.I went looking for old retro games for art but have no idea what game this is, so let’s call it Super Princess Ship Quest. Press Ctrl+X and then Y and Enter to save the changes.Add the following line to the end of the script: /usr/bin/emulationstation.bashrc Bash shell script in the nano text editor: sudo nano /home/YourUserName/.bashrc With auto-login enabled, run the following command (replacing YourUserName with your own username) to open the.In a Terminal window, type the following command to open the Raspberry Pi configuration tool: sudo raspi-config Enable auto-login by selecting, 1 System Options > S5 Boot / Auto Login and then choose either B2 Console Autologin or B4 Desktop Autologin.Once you are connected via SSH to the Raspberry Pi, follow these steps to enable auto-login (if not already enabled) and start the RetroPie emulator automatically on boot. You can use the Fing app or check your router's DHCP settings to find the Raspberry Pi's IP address so you can SSH in. Power on the Raspberry Pi and connect it to your router using a LAN cable.
