How is the R36S portable console built with 22,000 retro games from a variety of platforms?
Do you like old video games? The console presented here allows you to run many titles from different platforms such as Atari, NES, PlayStation or Game Boy, all in one handy device. With an open system and a large number of emulated platforms, the possibilities are truly great - let's find out how it's made and based on which system it works.
Setup, first run
The gadget in question is based on a 64-bit processor clocked at up to 1.5 GHz and 1 GB of RAM. It offers a 3.5" IPS OCA colour display with 640x480 resolution and a 3000 mAh lithium battery. It is available to buy for around £150, although there are cheaper clones in circulation too. The price may seem steep, so it remains to be seen if it was worth it. However, it has to be said that the kit is quite rich. We get:
- console with battery
- memory cards: 32 GB and 128 GB
- uSB cable (for charging)
- case
- manual
- cleaning wipes for the screen and a protective film for the screen
Indeed, the console has two microSD card slots. One for the system, the other for games.
Brief instructions:
I do not associate the brand of microSD card with the centre:
When we boot the console without SD cards, the message refers us to emulationstation.org.
The console reminds me of the classic Game Boy, although of course it contains more games. I can't remember if I had this as a child, but I found it difficult to control at first. It doesn't always explicitly say what does which key. Even with the menus I had to puzzle through. At the beginning we are greeted there by different collections of games - according to platform types:
We also have a search engine. I really don't know how I can test and represent the vastness of games available on this console. At first I thought the 20,000 games would come down to a dozen or so titles repeated many times in the list, as was the case on the old cartridges, but there are definitely more here, although I don't know if they really number in the thousands. It has to be said, however, that every title I wanted, I managed to find.
I tried playing random titles from different platforms, below is a sample video:
The console also offers the ScummVM runtime environment. ScummVM is a program that does not emulate the original hardware, but interprets the games' scripting languages (SCUMM and others) to describe the game world, characters, dialogue and gameplay mechanics. This allows games to run on modern operating systems, retaining the original logic and graphics, while eliminating the bugs and limitations of the original software.
Text can be entered if required, although it is not very convenient as you have to navigate with the pads. It is not a touchscreen!
You can navigate the cursor in a similar way:
Interior of R36S
All you need to do is unscrew six screws. One was hidden under the QC sticker.
The construction of the device is based on a single, at least two-layer PCB. Most components are surface mounted. At the heart of the console is a Rockchip RK3326 processor along with H9TQ32A4GTMC-URKUM memory.
Interestingly, the H9TQ32A4GTMC is a combination of eMMC memory (4 GB Flash) and LPDDR3 RAM (1 GB).
The Rockchip RK3326 is a quad-core ARM Cortex-A35 processor clocked at up to 1.5 GHz and features Mali-G31 graphics with support for OpenGL ES 3.2, Vulkan 1.0 and OpenCL 2.0, a dedicated 2D engine and hardware video decoding up to 1080p@60 fps (H.265, H.264, VC-1, MPEG-1/2/4, VP8) and H.264/VP8 encoding, supporting RGB/LVDS/MIPI-DSI displays up to 1920×1080, MIPI-CSI/DVP interfaces with embedded 8 MP ISP and a rich I/O set including I2S/TDM/PDM, SDIO 3.0, USB 2.0 OTG, I2C, UART and SPI.
All powered by inverters based on the same manufacturer's RK817 chip:
The RK817 controls four synchronous step-down inverters and also handles battery charging. In addition, it contains nine LDO stabilisers and a built-in RTC (real-time clock). However, it should be noted here that I also see a 4057A charge controller on the PCB, at the battery connector:
In the centre of the board is a single, small speaker. For older games it is rather sufficient:
There's also a 4:1 multiplexer on the board, which I suspect is used to operate the pads.
Out of curiosity I checked what was heating up inside. The main processor is the strongest:
Second to heat up is the inverter controller:
The wiki page for this console:
https://handhelds.wiki/R36S_Handheld_Wiki
Operating system
The console is based on ArkOS 2.0 as of 08232024, i.e. August 2024. If necessary, you can upgrade to the latest version, i.e. 11072025 at the time of writing this topic.
ArkOS is an operating system developed primarily for retro consoles based on Rockchip processors. The name "ArkOS" comes from "Another Rockchip Operating System" - meaning "another operating system for Rockchip".
The system was started as a modification of The Retro Arena project with the main goal of facilitating the ROMs folder on the NTFS partition - this made managing games from within Windows very simple (just insert the SD card into the reader and copy the files). Over time, the project evolved and diverged significantly from the original, leading to a name change to ArkOS as proposed by the community.
The system is based on Ubuntu 19.10 and includes both 64-bit and 32-bit user spaces, allowing for maximum wide support for emulators and game ports of various versions. ArkOS offers emulation of more than 90 retro platforms, from classic consoles to older PCs and handhelds.
Information:
https://github.com/christianhaitian/arkos/wiki
https://github.com/AeolusUX/ArkOS-R3XS
Summary
It might seem that more than £100 is a big price for such a console, but nothing could be further from the truth. I myself remember when you still had to pay a few tens of zlotys for a single cartridge, and it's still hard to compare these amounts without taking inflation into account.
There are a huge number of games here, although I personally admit that I prefer a much larger screen. It's definitely not for everyone, but if someone likes the form of such a portable device, they'll certainly find something here for themselves. What I miss, however, is a video output for an external monitor.
However, the possibilities of this console are really great, and ArkOS itself is well documented on the web. The only thing I didn't like about this console was the form of input - does anyone want to use a pad on the on-screen keyboard to select letters?
In short, the pros:
+ entire childhood (or rather, childhood - thousands of games.... i only remember a dozen titles from mine, buying each one was a holiday) in one portable console
+ the project is open, you can add games, it supports ScummVM, etc.
+ there is full documentation of the system on the web, in case of problems you can make a clean microSD card with the system again
Minus:
- i am puzzled by the quality of these microSD cards, the ArkOS authors themselves suggest using good brands such as Sandisk, Samsung, or PNY
- there is no support for fast charging (Quick Charge)
- the most demanding titles (already with 3D) may have performance problems
- it would be useful to have an output, at least even AV on an RCA connector, or HDMI....
- i do not see a two-player option here (although some supported games offer it)
- no wireless connectivity (Wi-Fi, etc)
Do you guys go back to retro games sometimes? Feel free to discuss.
Comments
I've come across the opinion that the first thing to do is copy the contents of the card to a branded one. These cards can give errors even in a freshly unboxed console. [Read more]
Shortly after the launch at my place, it didn't fall apart, but it basically agrees, after all this is included in the original text. This information comes directly from the materials arkos , this... [Read more]
The manufacturer must have saved on something with good cards it would probably cost £150-180. You need a decent card to read a lot of small files. [Read more]
It's also worth backing up these cards if you need to. Dumping to a computer is not a problem, the files are not large, and it will save you the trouble of doing this if you need to. [Read more]
150PLN for such a console is a pittance, I myself am thinking of buying anbernic rg557 to play even ps2 titles without clipping, and it already costs over 1000PLN. [Read more]
While the interior and performance is even OK, even running PS2 games, there is hard plastic everywhere, loud clicking and inaccurate buttons. The enjoyment of gaming is low. There are some with WiFi... [Read more]
CRT TV for retro gaming, that's what. Although you also have to admit that you can just run the emulator on a regular PC - that's more likely to work for most titles too? And you also get the convenient... [Read more]
Did you know that the console presented is a fake? The original version of the console has two memory bones and the current version of the board is V22 and it has an extra place to solder in the WiFi... [Read more]
That's interesting, according to what you wrote, I got the EmuELEC version? https://obrazki.elektroda.pl/8988133000_1766834576_bigthumb.jpg https://obrazki.elektroda.pl/5103265100_1766834616_bigthumb.jpg... [Read more]
And where do you buy the originals to be sure? [Read more]
The original is best bought on AliExpress from the Boyhom shop. When there are some promotions on ali you go get the console for that 70-80£. You can find a list of other shops that have originals at:... [Read more]
Thanks for the substantive addendum. So that means that the world of these modern consoles is also intricate and complicated. Weaker processor and RAM... hm, I wonder if, in some cases after all, it's... [Read more]
Now there's a fashion for such portable consoles and retro in general, so they've made loads of models of this. With these clones is the biggest problem, that if you hit on a different proc, then you... [Read more]
Thanks for the important information. Yes, I have managed to get the Amiga and Commodore working, but the experience without a joystick or keyboard very poor. By the way now people are buying sticks... [Read more]
In the event that someone has a TV on AndroidTV/GoogleTV or some set-top box on these systems, you can try installing Retroarch directly on them: https://www.retroarch.com/?page=platforms And connect... [Read more]
I have the Miyoo mini plus. A nice gadget, but too small a screen for me though. Based on SoC SSD202D 2x A7 1.2GHz and 128MB DDR3 interestingly built into the chip. So a weaker chip than the one described.... [Read more]
don't forget about portmaster :) that is ports (mainly) from PC to arm. Heros3, halflife etc. https://portmaster.games/games.html [Read more]
It's a good thing I switched off from gaming, or rather the gaming hardware became too demanding and one let go. Nowadays I think a console comes out cheaper for gaming than a PC. [Read more]