![]() There are many emulators out there that are made specifically for this purpose. If you have a PS2, you can get a SNES adapter so you can use those cartridges as well. SNES emulators have been created for almost every game that has a cartridge. It is a great way to enjoy all the classic Nintendo games on your Wii, or on your PC. SNES emulators allow you to use your old console to play the older games you have always wanted to play. Nintendo eventually released the nSNES, or the North American version, a year later, and it was a huge hit.īecause of its popularity, you can now find a SNES Emulator for almost any system out there. It was one of the first home consoles to incorporate the chip that is used in modern gaming consoles, but because it was an advance in technology, it was expensive for the general public. SNES stands for Super Nintendo Entertainment system, and it was released in Japan in 1991. sneslib_comp appears it be vanilla snes9x version 1.A SNES emulator is a kind of tool that allows you to play older Nintendo console games on your modern computer without buying the new versions. This is the default emulator engine SNesoid uses. It looks like sneslib is more-or-less Reesy's DrPocketSNES version 6.4.4, which in turn is based on snes9x 1.39, including several components written in native ARM assembly. It appears SNesoid includes two complete copies of Snes9x: what Zhang calls sneslib and sneslib_comp. SNesoid is a great example of wrapping a large preexisting native codebase in an Android application. ![]() Additionally, 1.52 breaks compatibility with all previous savestate files (however, it will still work with SRAM saves). SNesoid currently uses fairly old versions of Snes9x, and I am interested in bringing it up to date with the latest version, 1.52, however it is possible (likely?) that 1.52's performance will be significantly worse than the current 1.43 version. I suspect my build changes can be applied to his other emulators as well, but I have not yet explored them. ![]() As of 10/17/10 he has just posted version 2.1 of many of his emulators. I intend to keep my fork of SNesoid synced with any future updates Zhang Yong posts to sourceforge. I am still trying to find a fix for this. Repeatedly running ndk-build builds each successive assembly file, so by the fourth time you run ndk-build the app will build successfully. There seems to be a weird problem with how NDK r5 handles assembly (.s) files causing the build to fail with a mv: rename No such file or directory error. IMPORTANT NOTE FOR USERS OF THE LATEST NDK (r5b): Once you've compiled the native components you should be able to compile and run the Android project via Eclipse or ant. This will compile the native portions of the application: snes9x and the bridge to Android. ![]()
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