Adafruit Arcade Bonnet for Raspberry Pi with JST Connectors – Mini Kit
Playing retro games is easy on a Raspberry Pi – and that pocket-sized computer is pretty good at it too! All you need is a little help to connect buttons and a joystick up and you can custom design your arcade console, desktop, or stand-up machine, even just a simple controller box. It makes for a fun weekend project that will last all year.
This Adafruit Arcade Bonnet is designed to make small emulator projects a little easier to build. Here’s what you can look forward to!
- It is the same size as a Pi Zero, so for really compact builds, this is super small. You can also use it with a Pi 2, 3, B+, or any 2×20 connector Pi.
- It has JST sockets so you can plug in six arcade buttons.
- Header breakouts for use with both clicky-type switched joysticks and…
- Header breakout and converter for using analog-type joysticks or thumbsticks with potentiometers inside.
- A 3W digital speaker output that can drive 4-8 ohm speakers when used with a TV output, audio-less HDMI display or PiTFT. Works even when the Pi doesn’t have a headphone jack!
- Switches are all managed with an I2C-GPIO converter with interrupt out. The converter is very fast and frees up all the pins so you can use this Bonnet with a PiTFT or any other accessory/device that uses a lot of pins!
If you don’t need an amplified speaker output, analog-joystick input, or minimal pin usage, check out our plain-jane Retrogame tutorial which just plugs all the buttons and joysticks right into the Pi directly.
This item is sold as a mini-kit, with a Bonnet and headers that need to be soldered in to attach it to a Raspberry Pi! It only takes a few minutes but soldering iron and solder are required.
Note: The terminal block included with your product may be blue or black.
It also does not come with any of the extras, so you can choose which buttons/joysticks/speaker you want!Â
Note: Raspberry Pi, arcade buttons, joysticks, speaker, display, and quick-connect wires are NOT included and must be purchased separately.
Once you’ve picked out all your buttons and joysticks and stuff, check out our Getting-started guide to help you get going!