And it comes with 30gb of encrypted roms on the stock sd card, which you might want to use. Since it can only read from external storage, that means that having just one card formatted as internal won't work. So say you don't mind using an SD card reader, and your primary use case is RetroidOS - or even using it at all. Then go to settings -> storage on the device -> select card -> migrate apps and data. To do that, go to settings -> storage -> select card -> menu -> format as internal. The catch? Once it's formatted as internal it's locked into use on that device unless formatted (which wipes it) and made external again. And there's not very much onboard internal storage, only about 5gb. In addition, Android installs apps on the internal storage first, regardless if you have external storage space available. In its current state, plugging the RP2 into a PC via USB only lets you transfer files to Android if the sd card is formatted as internal. Android can read from internal and external storage, but RetroidOS can only read from external storage. ![]() I won't go into which sd card is fastest because there's a good post for that. *Ī lot of people are asking about sd cards and formatting so here's a breakdown. * TLDR: For the most flexibility use two SD cards, one formatted as internal for Android roms and another as external for RetroidOS. If and when they do that, there will be no reason not to format as internal other than to use the SD card and roms in another device. ![]() UPDATE SEPT 12: It seems like Retroid is fixing the issue of RetroidOS not reading from internal storage in a near update.
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