• @bulwark@lemmy.world
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      72 years ago

      Out of curiosity what is the most modern system you are able to emulate on a steam deck. I’ve dabbled in MAME and PSX before, but is there a decent PS3 one?

      • @sp6@lemmy.world
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        82 years ago

        On the Playstation side, RPCS3 is the PS3 emulator, it’s great. There are some experimental PS4 emulators, but they aren’t ready yet.

        On the Xbox side, Xenia works well as an Xbox 360 emulator; it’s not linux native though, but it might work well under wine. I’m not aware of Xbox One (or later) emulators.

        On the Nintendo side, I would be surprised if a Nintendo game that couldn’t be emulated exists. Even Switch games run very well on day 1 of release.

        • @PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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          82 years ago

          Yeah, don’t take this guy face value. These systems don’t emulate excellently at all. It definitely emulates perfectly up to GameCube and PS2 though.

          • MudMan
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            42 years ago

            Sorry, I had responded but also missed the “Steam Deck” qualifier. To be clear, the poster you’re responding to is absolutely right in general terms, but performance will be an issue for 360 and probably PS3 on the Deck.

          • MudMan
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            12 years ago

            No, he’s pretty much right on the money. It takes a bit more performance and the setup is much harder and more annoying, since there’s a bunch of encryption and account stuff to spoof, but short of annoying compilation stutters, most modern gaming PCs can manage it.

            Compatibility depends on the system. The PS Vita is very spotty, 360 isn’t fully there, but WiiU and Switch are nearly perfect and PS3 games are much more likely to work than not.

        • @systemglitch@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          I’ve got some PS2 games to run well, some don’t run well at all. Anything below that is great.

          So what I’ve got is: NES, SNES, Genesis and Master System, PS1, PSP and then PS2 as a hit and miss.

          I’ve not tried anything aside from those yet on the Steam Deck.

          Edit: noticed I replied to the wrong person, but close enough, I’m not fixing it because I’m about to fall asle…

        • @chepox@sopuli.xyz
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          02 years ago

          Would you be able to run AetherSX2 (android PS2 emulator) somehow on the deck to run ps2 games? That app runs a lot of then pretty well on Android phones.

      • @shrodes@lemmy.world
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        72 years ago

        Depends a lot on the games and compatibility. As mentioned Switch is definitely emulateable and often runs great but it heavily depends on the title.

      • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        22 years ago

        A dude I work with just showed me PS3 emulation on the Steamdeck and it’s LUDICROUSLY good. I was shocked.

          • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            12 years ago

            You’re not wrong at all. I tried a few years ago on a high end machine with awful results. Now, thanks to incredible devs, even a lil Steamdeck can run tons of games better than an actual PS3.

    • Entropy
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      32 years ago

      I did this for a bit, but then put emudeck on my PC (which has a lot more storage) and now I stream pretty much everything from my PC to my TV or deck

      Thousands of roms and a few hundred games pretty much whenever I want. My 10 year old self would never believe this

    • @frezik@midwest.social
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      12 years ago

      I’ve been going through the Turbografx/PC Engine library, particularly shumps. Lots of stuff that gets overlooked from when Nintendo and Sega were dominating.

  • Phanatik
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    332 years ago

    Emulating games is important but I would argue that preserving the games is moreso. If you have discs of old games lying around (I grabbed the original floppy disk version of Marathon by Bungie for less than 5 quid), please find out how to dump them into an ISO or some other archive. It’s important now more than ever as games tend towards digital distribution and old games are lost to time. The games don’t have to be good, they just need to be preserved.

  • @Alteon@lemmy.world
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    272 years ago

    I literally just set up Project64 and SNES9X yesterday lol. Nice timing. I tried Higan, but couldn’t get it to run games and got tired of trying to fix it. 9X works well enough for me to get my nostalgia fix.

      • @systemglitch@lemmy.world
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        62 years ago

        I’ve always preferred genesis overall, but that’s what’s great about emulation, we can have all the great systems and entire room sets on an SD card

      • @CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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        32 years ago

        I’ve done plenty of SNES and NES emulation, haven’t done much on SEGA yet. Any suggestions for SEGA games that are worth trying?

        • I Cast Fist
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          2 years ago

          Depends on what you’re looking for. Phantasy Star 4 is an excellent JRPG. Crusader of Centy/Soleil, Landstalker and Beyond Oasis are good Zelda-ish games. Gunstar Heroes and Contra Hard Corps are excellent run’n gun games.

          Comix Zone is a cult classic and hard as fuck. Kid Chameleon is also worth trying, though do so with lots of patience. For beat’em up, Streets of Rage

          An interesting side note: a lot of the games that are on the SNES and on the Mega Drive/Genesis are different mainly due to Nintendo contracts: “You won’t release the same game on competing platforms”. This led to several similar but different games, especially from Konami

          PS: Also check out dreamcast games, it has the best version of Soul Reaver and Dead or Alive 2.

          PPS: Shadowrun on the Genesis is VASTLY superior to the SNES game.

        • @gibmiser@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          I agree with the guy who said Gunstar Heros and Contra. Also for a crazy weird sidescroller with humor and good music try Earthworm Jim.

    • @schmidtster@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      I got a steamdeck for my birthday and I’ve only put EmuDeck on it, they are working on a PC version, it’s an all in one package.

      • @TomFrost@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        RetroArch is super popular and available across many systems, with a bunch of open source frontends for it. I have it on a Raspberry Pi, a Mac, an OG Oculus Quest, playing everything from MAME to PSX.

    • @Deway@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      For accurate SNES (and several other) emulation and yet easy to use, Ares is the goto now.

  • @Affidavit@aussie.zone
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    152 years ago

    Don’t forget to check out rom hacks as well. There are so many creative people who have extended or redeveloped games into their own image. Some good ones that come to mind are Chrono Trigger: Prophet’s Guile and Super Mario 64: Last Impact.

    • @shrodes@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      Can’t wait for the MM decomp and similar Ship project there. I’ve never played and and I’m holding out on that and all the great modern tweaks it brings over existing emulation.

    • KanariePieter
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      22 years ago

      Good to see they have an AppImage now. Setting it up on Linux was a hassle when I last played it around a year and a half ago.

  • 𝕾𝖕𝖎𝖈𝖞 𝕿𝖚𝖓𝖆
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    142 years ago

    I have a Homebrew Wii that I got set up about 10 or so years ago. Homebrew Wii can run lots of stuff. With emulation, it plays any 2D Nintendo game really well. I haven’t tried N64 emulation on it yet, but I imagine it’s pretty good.

    Then it has hardware support for the entire GameCube library.

    Basically Homebrew Wii can play every Nintendo game up to its own generation.

  • @simple@lemm.ee
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    112 years ago

    If you need a quickstart on emulation, I highly recommend Ludo. it’s a wonderful frontend that comes packaged with most emulators and just works without any fiddling.

    Ludo is a retroarch spinoff that has sane defaults and a simpler interface.

  • I emulate a lot on my phone so I have something to do when waiting around while out of the house. Even emulating Windows and DOS to play old PC games that work great with touch controls.

    • Seven
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      22 years ago

      I enjoy Space Crusade under DosBox, it’s a very slow game but suits touchscreen pretty well :-)

    • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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      22 years ago

      What apps do you use to emulate Windows and DOS on Android? And what games? I guess any point and click game could work fine.

      • What apps do you use to emulate Windows and DOS on Android?

        Wine and Magic DOSBox.

        And what games? I guess any point and click game could work fine.

        SimCity 2000 and Masters of Orion get the most play for me.

  • @Spaceinv8er@sh.itjust.works
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    82 years ago

    Start it at 11 minutes. Everything before that is just his opinions on why people don’t want to emulate games.

    Not saying it’s a waste of time or anything, just if you already know the arguments then it’s unnecessary.

  • @PolarisFx@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    62 years ago

    Just picked up a new FireTV 4k Max because I heard it was the perfect device for emulation, and it is. And fairly cheap. I had been running emulators on an older firestick but the new one has much better OTG support and will recognize USB storage without mounting via Adb. RetroArch and many other standalone emulators are available on the Amazon store so you don’t even need to sideload the apps anymore.

    Ive tested up to PS2 and barring a few known titles it’ll run pretty much everything. N64 included.

    Amazon have stated they plan to drop Android on their sticks in the future, and switch to their own OS which I doubt will support these kinds of uses, so grab one while you can.

  • Nacktmull
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    52 years ago

    I once spent a 2 week holiday playing an R-Type and Metal Slug game-athon using MAME.

    10/10 would emulate again.

  • @LoganNineFingers@lemmy.ca
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    22 years ago

    What’s the most modern you could emulate on an android phone (s23)?

    And is retroarch the best bet?

    I’ve been entertaining the idea of buying a cheap laptop to play with Linux after yesterday’s posts and the idea of being able to emulate some more modern stuff and maybe install steam is appealing.

    • @raptir@lemdro.id
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      32 years ago

      I’ve been deep in the Android emulation rabbit hole for a while.

      RetroArch is a great all-in-one solution, but it can be tricky to customize. For example, you can’t move on-screen controls through any sort of interface, but need to edit a configuration file to do so. It also won’t automatically adjust the controls to the game you’re playing - you would need to manually override the configuration to use an SNES overlay for SNES games. That said, the default “retropad” on-screen controls work fairly well for most consoles if you don’t feel like customizing all of them.

      RetroArch is going to provide the most accurate emulation cores for basically everything up through the N64/Playstation. Is it the best? If you take a few minutes to learn how to customize it then definitely. In addition to being accurate, it has a great system for video shaders that work across all consoles.

      Outside of that Dolphin is solid for GameCube/Wii. Yuzu is available for Switch but only some games will be playable.