Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.īyuu has been collecting every Super Nintendo and Super Famicom game in existence for several years as part of his SNES preservation project, which involves dumping games to ensure he has a collection of ROMs with no errors, and scanning boxes and manuals at high resolution. Sign up to get the best content of the week, and great gaming deals, as picked by the editors. Only the eagle-eyed will spot differences between good and perfect emulation, but it's an important distinction for preservation. If you're not well-versed in emulation, that's more impressive than it sounds-it takes a modern 3+ GHz CPU to perfectly emulate the SNES's 3.58 MHz chip, which is why virtually every other emulator relies on hacks and tricks to emulate games at playable framerates on PCs. It's essentially the same argument as you'd make for a gun, a knife, or a car."īyuu pursues emulation development to preserve games, and has famously created an essentially perfect SNES emulator called bsnes (now rolled into higan). There's no denying that," higan emulator author Byuu wrote to me over email. "Emulation does enable piracy, unfortunately. The emulation experts I spoke with all considered this a negative, but didn't see piracy as a reason to stop developing emulators. The eternal ethical dilemma for emulator developers is simple: if they build it, the pirates will come. Image via What emulation developers think about piracy
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