#5646

BizHawk is a free and open-source multi-system universal emulator written in C#. Its goal is to eventually simulate all game consoles, and already supports FC, MD, GBA, SFC, SMS, NES, SNES, N64, PC Engine, SS, PS, PSP, and so on more than 10 game consoles. It comes with the professional TAS functions while taking the ease of use into account. That said, BizHawk not only can be used for game clearance video production with TAS, but also is friendly for casual gaming.
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5627
Sometimes we may want a program to run as a window, to be automatically minimized after running, to run multiple instances of a program with different parameters (i.e.: software multi-opening, multi-boxing), or to automatically appear somewhere with a fixed window size after running... These ideas are beautiful, but they are very difficult to implement. But now you can try Advanced Run.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5616

Mednafen (short for My Emulator Doesn't Need A Frickin' Excellent Name, formerly known as Nintencer) is a free, open-source and multi-system video game console emulator for Windows, Mac and Linux platforms. It already emulates nearly 20 home and handheld game consoles from Atari to PS1 era, such as FC, MD, GB, GBA, PS, SS, PC-FX, etc.
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5613
XEBRA is a little-known but excellent free PlayStation emulator for Windows and Android platforms, developed by Dr.Hell from Japan. It strictly focuses on the accuracy of PlayStation emulation, does not use any plugins, and only outputs in native video resolution. At the same time, it is also one of the very few PSX emulators that is compatible with PocketStation.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5606

Office Tool Plus is simple yet very helpful one-stop deploying tool specially designed for Microsoft Office, developed by Yerong (a senior high school student) from China. It is primarily used to quickly download, configure/customize, install, activate and manage all Microsoft Office products.
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5604
Packing a program is the most common way developers protect their software. Therefore, in order to crack some software, the first step is to detect whether it has been packed. Detect It Easy (DiE for Short) is a very powerful and easy-to-use PE packers detection tool developed by horsicq from Germany. It has very comprehensive and functional PE packer detection functions, simple operation, and is widely used as one of the most important auxiliary tools for software cracking for now.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5599

DuckStation is a free and open-source Sony PlayStation (PS/PS1/PSX/PSone/ PS One) game console emulator for Windows, Mac, Linux and Android platforms, developed primarily by Connor McLaughlin (stenzek) from Australia - who is also one of the more active developers of Dolphin (Nintendo's NGC/Wii emulator) in recent years. It can be regarded as the best successor to ePSXe. That is, ePSXe is no longer the #1 PS emulator, it is now.
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5596
LaunchBox was originally developed as a front-end application for DOSBox, but has since evolved into a powerful multi-platform game launcher and manager for both modern PC games and retro video games. It gives us a better gaming experience, and allows us to manage games more intuitively and efficiently. If your computer has a lot of games, then LaunchBox could be just what you need.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5594

yuzu is a free and open-source Nintendo Switch emulator for Windows and Linux platforms, developed by the creators of Citra (the Nintendo 3DS emulator) in 2018 (that had only been 10 months since Switch was released). It is the best Switch emulator out there, based on the Citra (they share a lot of code), written in C++, has portability, and its features are still being improved.
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
#5593
At the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century (198x~200x), when the Internet was not developed enough, the 80s and 90s were most interested in playing all kinds of video games and handheld console games. Nowadays, in order to play retro games on a variety of devices (computer/smartphone/smart TV....), you've probably tried various game emulators, as well as independent systems like Batocera.linux, Ubuntu GamePack, Lakka. Then, you should also try Pegasus this kind of emulator frontend.

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...