Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
58 lines (40 loc) · 2.08 KB

Readme.md

File metadata and controls

58 lines (40 loc) · 2.08 KB

N64 Digital Video Out Using PicoDVI

This project allows you to output digital video from an N64 using a Raspberry Pi Pico and a DVISock.

Hardware Requirements

  • Raspberry Pi Pico
  • DVISock

The digital video signals need to be wired to the Pico as per the wiring diagram below:

Pre-Built Binaries

Pre-built binaries are available in the Releases section of this GitHub repository. You can download the latest binary by following these steps:

  1. Click on the Releases tab.
  2. Select the most recent release.
  3. Download the "PicoDVI-N64" zip file which contains .uf2 files that can be programmed to the pico.

The "PicoDVI-N64" zip file contains the following .uf2 files:

  • picodvi-n64-32000hz-rgb555.uf2: 32,000 Hz, 15-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-32000hz-rgb565.uf2: 32,000 Hz, 16-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-44100hz-rgb555.uf2: 44,100 Hz, 15-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-44100hz-rgb565.uf2: 44,100 Hz, 16-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-48000hz-rgb555.uf2: 48,000 Hz, 15-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-48000hz-rgb565.uf2: 48,000 Hz, 16-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-96000hz-rgb555.uf2: 96,000 Hz, 15-bit color
  • picodvi-n64-96000hz-rgb565.uf2: 96,000 Hz, 16-bit color
  • picodvi-n64.uf2: Default configuration (96,000 Hz, 15-bit color)

Choose the .uf2 file that matches your desired audio sample rate and color depth, and use it to flash the Pico. Some applications or games may work better with some configurations.

Building the Software

Before building the software, ensure you have a working Pico SDK setup.

Follow these steps to build the software:

cd software
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make n64

After building the software, you will have a apps/n64/n64.uf2 file which you can use to flash the Pico.

Credits

This project has been made possible thanks to the following repositories: