RetroCompass
RetroCompass

Pocket Mini — Custom firmware

Quick answer

Button combo

Google Playinstall ES-DE / Daijisho / Beaconset as front-end

Steps

  1. 1Note: the Pocket Mini is Android — there is no Linux CFW; you change the front-end on top of stock Android.
  2. 2Install RetroArch (stable build, not the Play Store version) plus standalone emulators.
  3. 3From Google Play install a front-end: ES-DE, Daijisho, or Beacon.
  4. 4Point the front-end at your ROM folders on the microSD and scrape artwork.
  5. 5Optionally set the front-end (or AOSP launcher) as the default home app.
Last verified: 2026-06-20Source: goretroid.com

On the Pocket Mini there is no Linux-style custom firmware like on Anbernic Linux units; it runs Android, so customization means swapping the front-end over stock Android. Most users install RetroArch (the stable build, not the Play Store one) for cores up to PS1, add standalone emulators for heavier systems, then layer a console-like front-end such as ES-DE, Daijisho, or Beacon that suits the compact AMOLED screen. These organize your library, scrape artwork, and launch games into the right emulator. The redesigned Retroid launcher and the AOSP launcher both remain available as the default home app.

FAQ

Is there a Linux custom firmware for the Pocket Mini?
No. The Pocket Mini is an Android handheld. There is no Linux CFW; you customize by installing front-ends like ES-DE, Daijisho, or Beacon over stock Android.
Which front-end should I use?
ES-DE is the most console-like once configured; Daijisho is quicker to set up. Both come from Google Play and launch games into RetroArch or standalone emulators.