![]() But you’re going to want to add Bottles itself as a non-Steam game, because we’re going to need to launch Bottles through Game Mode later on to configure the Deck’s controls. Unfortunately I haven’t had any luck adding the game as a non-Steam shortcut. You can optionally add MPR to your Bottles library by clicking the three-dotted button on the program and selecting the appropriate option from the dropdown menu. “MPR” should now be listed under the “Programs” section. Click the “+” icon on the right on the window border, then locate the MPR.exe file from the folder you had extracted earlier. Click the bottle and go to the “Programs” tab. ![]() If everything went well you should have the bottle listed under the “Bottles” tab on the main window. Leave the environment on “Gaming”.Ĭlick “Create”. Let’s create a new bottle by clicking the “+” icon on the top-right. Search for “Bottles” on the Discover app, or install it via the command line with:įlatpak install flathub īottles should now be available under “Utilities” on the Start menu. It creates individual containers called “bottles” and gives us all the dependencies we could possibly need for an application. Install and Configure Bottles ⌗īottles is an application similar to Lutris. ![]() I have mine in /home/deck/Emulation/roms/gamecube/. Take your legally-acquired ISO of Prime (it can either be v1.0 of the GameCube version or any version of the Trilogy) and copy it over to your Deck if you haven’t already. You can use something like Flatseal to manage Flatpak permissions and have Bottles – the tool we’re going to need next – have access to different folders. The reason why it needs to be in a particular folder like these is because of the way Flatpaks work they can only access certain folders. Extract the zip file to your Documents or your Downloads folder. Get MPR ⌗ĭownload the latest release of MPR from GitHub on your Deck in Desktop Mode. The Trilogy may be a little different as far as controls go. NOTE: I made this guide with the GameCube version of Prime in mind. Nonetheless, by following this guide, hopefully you won’t have to go through the headache that I did. Getting MPR to work on the Deck was a very tedious process. Long story short, we probably won’t ever see a Linux release of this Dolphin fork anytime soon – due to complications in porting the archaic Ishiiruka code into something that Linux can understand, according to one of the developers – but fortunately for us, we’ve got compatibility layers like Wine and Bottles to do the work for us. Plus, we have the addition of keyboard and mouse controls, as well as support for resolutions much larger than what the Switch can handle. Hence we have an unofficial remaster that would knock any official one out of the water. Well, if Nintendo ain’t gonna do it, leave it up to the fans. But, of course, our expectations got crushed. It would have made sense considering this year marks the 20th anniversary of the beloved title. There were rumors of an official remaster of Metroid Prime coming this year. If you’re like me, you were probably left with a bad taste in your mouth after this year’s Nintendo Direct. EDIT (): this is for the UNOFFICIAL remaster.
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