After some delays due to recent issues we are pleased to announce RetroPie 4.5.

This version does NOT work on the recently released Raspberry Pi 4. We are currently working on support for this.

IMPORTANT UPDATE: It has come to our attention that composite out is broken on this release. See https://retropie.org.uk/2019/07/composite-out-broken-on-retropie-4-5/ for further details.

RetroPie 4.5 for the Raspberry Pi is based on Raspbian Stretch. This may be our last image based on Stretch as it looks as though the Raspberry Pi foundation are now concentrating their efforts on the recently released Raspbian Buster. Some parts of RetroPie already work on Buster on the Raspberry Pi 1/2 and 3 but it’s not officially supported yet.

We held off on making this release due to a Raspbian kernel update which broke pairing of Sony Bluetooth devices. We have worked around this on the Raspberry Pi images by installing more recent firmware/kernel packages from the Buster distribution.

Please see the changelog below for more information on the changes since RetroPie 4.4.

You can download a 4.5 image from https://retropie.org.uk/download/. For first installs please follow the Installation Instructions.

You can also install RetroPie on top of an existing Raspbian Stretch set up, or on top of Ubuntu on a PC/Odroid-C1/C2/XU3/XU4. Links to the relevant instructions can be found on the Download area.

If you want to support the project, donations are always appreciated and can be made on our Donation Page. The main developer Jools Wills also has a Patreon page up at https://www.patreon.com/retropie.

Changes since 4.4

Dropped Raspbian/Debian Jessie support

Raspberry Pi 3 A+ support (via Stretch firmware update)

Many new es themes added

Added Skyscraper (Scraper for Emulation Station game lists)

RetroArch updated to v1.7.6

Amiberry (Amiga emulator) updated to v2.25, including support for launching whdload and CD32 titles from ES.

Jzintv (Intellivision emulator) updated to 20181225 release

atari800 – updated to v4.0.0

Mupen64plus – updated to latest version (GlideN64 stability and compatibility improved), as well as other changes.

Fuse (ZX Spectrum emulator) updated to v1.5.7

ZEsarUX (ZX Spectrum emulator) updated to v7

advmame (Advance MAME arcade emulator) – updated to v3.9

Fixed building of quake3 for RPI.

Added love-0.10.2 (2d Game Engine) for compatibility with older games.

Dosbox updated to SVN r4194 including joystick fix for 360 controllers.

CGenius – updated to v2.3.1

lr-flycast (libretro Dreamcast emulator) – renamed from lr-reicast and enabled for arm platforms including the RPI.

reicast – Switched to updated upstream repository – the latest code includes bugfixes and improvements including better game compatibility as well as our RPI fixes.

lr-ppsspp – switched to upstream repository for latest version

lr-fbneo (Arcade and console emulator) – renamed from lr-fblpha – lots of improvements including neo geo cd support, and optional cyclone 68k core for better performance on slower devices for some games.The emulator can now be selected as an alternate emulator for Sega Genesis/Mastersystem/SG-1000, PC-Engine, MSX, ColecoVision and ZXSpectrum.

Fixes and updates to many libretro cores

Kodi updated to the 18 “Leia” release (only available in Raspbian Stretch)

Improvements/fixes to joystick control in runcommand launch menu

Fixes / Improvements to bluetooth pairing

Added sixaxis driver – better DualShock 3 controller support with full bluetooth coexistence Third-party (Shanwan/Gasia) controller support via customhidsony & custombluez drivers

lr-mame2014 renamed to lr-mame2015

Emulationstation – updated to v2.8.4 which includes: 2 new scrapers added for the TheGamesDB and ScreenScraper. Also many bugfixes and improvements including: Gridview support now in main version Hide MAME bios files by default Graphical / rendering fixes Loading progress Allow using analog sticks for navigation More flexible audio configuration Lots of code refactoring, bugfixes and performance improvements, including removing boost libraries making compilation faster (and code smaller). Search and load artwork based on ROM name (image and video) Experimental scripting support, triggered by events.

