- #SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI HOW TO#
- #SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI FOR MAC OS X#
- #SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI MAC OSX#
- #SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI ZIP FILE#
#SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI FOR MAC OS X#
Top 3 Free SNES Super Nintendo Emulators for Mac OS X to Play SNES Games on MacBook / iMac.
#SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI HOW TO#
It also was a little crude, but man that thing was fast! These guys know how to code.
I haven't yet tried playing any games on it, I didn't feel like unpacking my Woz //gs and seeing if any of my 5.25" disks would still read. KEGS I only tried enough to see that it ran and I could get it to boot up a ProDOS disk I had. Isn't Bonk the only game the TurboGrafx16 had? Is there even anything else that's worth playing? Not only that, how am I supposed to know which games are Hu card and which ones are CD? What the heck? There was a note that said CD support was missing and it could only play Hu cards. I didn't try out any of the games that use the 3D glasses or the light gun so I don't know what they would do or if they would be playable at all. Generator also doesn't like the games inside of zip files, not sure about Genesis Plus, I had already unzipped everything by the time I tried it.
Genesis Plus seemed to try to maintain the 4:3 aspect ratio of a TV. Under Generator, the emulated screen is fairly square. Also, Genesis Plus can emulate the 6 button controller, while Generator only does a 3 button controller. Altered Beast and Double Dragon played just fine though. Unfortunately when I tried to play Krusty's Fun House on it, the sound didn't work and mostly played static. Genesis Plus makes the claim of being exactly like a real Genesis. They both make the same claim of features, so why bother with RockNES that requires a 1ghz processor when Nestopia will do the job with an 800mhz processor? Sure my mini has enough horsepower to run either, but why make it work harder than necessary. RockNES played fine, but I honestly couldn't see what it offered over Nestopia.
#SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI ZIP FILE#
A little confusing at first because it didn't tell me that and happily loaded a zip file and then crashed.
KiGB plays games just fine, although they can't be in zip files. It also didn't have USB gamepad support and seemed kinda crude. VisualBoyAdvance was rather unresponsive, even on my 1.5ghz G4. It'd also be nice if it worked with the ZSNES. My only real complaints are I can't set the window to run at a 4:3 aspect ratio (but full screen will), and I can't map one of the extra buttons to a turbo shooter button like I can on ZSNES for Windoze. Emulator Enhancer adds the Mac specific code like USB gamepad support, sound options, full screen video support, plus some other things. If you use any of his ports you'll also want to get his Emulator Enhancer add-on. A majority of these emulators have been ported to OSX by Richard Bannister, you can view his site here. I also tried out RockNES, Genesis Plus, VisualBoyAdvance, Stella, KEGS and TGEmu. The emulators I went with were SNES9x, KiGB, Nestopia, Generator, and SMS Plus. Some platforms have several emulators to choose from, some only have one. I'm sure there's some platforms you've never even heard of. The list doesn't cover everything, but it sure does cover a lot.
#SNES EMULATOR MAC MINI MAC OSX#
Emulators are a little fancier than that, but the principle is similar.Ī good place to go to find a list of emulators that work with Mac OSX is the Pure Mac Emulator List. It's sort of like those engines that let you play the Infocom and Sierra adventures on different operating systems just by having the data file. The way it works is you get an application that acts like a sort of "game engine" that interprets the original game. Why wait for the Revolution?You've probably heard that the Revolution is going to allow you to play old console games.