Nestopia is a Nintendo NES emulator for Mac OS X. Nestopia is by far the most compatible of any NES emulator for Mac OS X. Using cycle-exact emulation, it is able to run titles that rely on precise timing, and which therefore break under other emulators. It supports five extra sound chips and an astonishing 143 mappers.
- CrabEmu is a video game console emulator for Mac OS X, Sega Dreamcast, and various other.nix-like targets. Currently, development is focused upon the 8-bit consoles built by Sega, with support for the Sega Master System, Game Gear, SG-1000 and ColecoVision.
- DeSmuME is a free and open source MAC emulator for Windows computer. It's cross-platform software. DeSmuME supports dual screen, screenshots, documentation, etc. You can also play Nintendo DS games using DeSmuME. It's one of the best free MAC emulator software for Windows, Wii, AmigaOS 4, MAC OS X and Linux.
Original author(s) | Josh Weinberg |
---|---|
Developer(s) | OpenEmu Team |
Stable release | |
Repository | |
Written in | Objective-C |
Operating system | macOS |
Size | 74.0 MB |
Available in | English |
Type | Video Game Emulator |
License | BSD |
Website | openemu.org |
OpenEmu is an open-source multi-system game emulator designed for macOS. It provides a plugin interface to emulate numerous consoles' hardware, such as the Nintendo Entertainment System, Genesis, Game Boy, and many more. The architecture allows for other developers to add new cores to the base system without the need to account for specific macOS APIs.
Version 1.0 was released on December 23, 2013, after a lengthy beta testing period.[1] Numerous incremental updates have been released since then, with plans to incorporate support for more consoles in future releases. Some of these in-development cores are available to download in an optional 'experimental' cores build (released alongside the regular, 'standard' version), containing support for arcade systems using MAME.
History[edit]
Beginnings[edit]
openwas first released on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 as OpenNestopia, a Cocoa-port written by Josh Weinberg for then Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger of the NES/Famicom emulator Nestopia (written by Martin Freij).[2] Weinberg and his friend, Ben Devacel, began searching for more developers to port other emulators to macOS, which led to the name change to OpenEmu in 2009, to better describe the multi-system emulator.[3]
1.0[edit]
OpenEmu 1.0 released on Monday, December 23, 2013 with 12 'cores' emulating Nintendo, Sega, NEC, and SNK's home, tabletop, and [[HanOpenEmu 1.0 needed Mac OS X Lion (10.7.x) to run. A Wednesday, October 15, 2014 (296 days later) midstream update to the OpenEmu library (1.0.4) would introduce Stella, a core emulating the 2600, a 2nd generation cosole from Atari.
2.0[edit]
Introduced on Wednesday, Dec 23, 2015, (exactly two years after 1.0) OpenEmu 2.0 was released. OpenEmu 2.0 began requiring a minimum of OS X El Capitan 10.11, dropping support for Mac OS X Lion (10.7.x) through OS X Yosemite (10.10.x). OpenEmu 2.0 introduced 16 new cores along with hundreds of bug fixes and lesser features. The new cores added several 2nd generation cores, support for optical media-based-image games, additionally emulating systems from Sony, Mattel, Bandai, Magnavox, Milton-Bradley, and Coleco. Another midsteam update, 2.0.6.1, released Tuesday, Dec 19, 2017 (727 days after 2.0) added support for Mednafen's Sega Saturn branch, with a suggested quad-core i7 CPU to emulate.
2.1 and 2.2[edit]
OpenEmu 2.1 (Friday, October 15, 2019, 675 days after version 2.0.6.1; 'coincidentally,' exactly 5 years after the 1.0.4 Stella update) was significant, not for any new cores, but for supporting Metal, Apple's visual API successor to OpenGL and OpenCl, giving OpenEmu significant gains in both performance and battery life.
OpenEmu 2.2 (Friday December 27, 2019, 63 days later) added support for a downstream, Metal-forked version of Dolphin's GameCubebranch, building on 2.1's foundation. This brings OpenEmu's number of supported cores to 31.
Limitations[edit]
32X Hybrid Games[edit]
As confirmed by the OpenEmu developers on their official subreddit, Sega 32X-CD hybrid games (versions of games that could use a 32X cartridge and Sega CD at once, such as Night Trap, Corpse Killer, and Fahrenheit) are not supported. Users are prompted with a 'This game requires the Sega 32X attachment' error if attempted.[4]
GameCube Limitations[edit]
At present, GameCube emulation doesn't support Save States (due to continual updates breaking compatibility with saved states); users are encouraged to use in-game saves.
OpenEmu GameCube emulation also does not support the [multi-disc GameCube titles] at present (despite the main Dolphin branch doing so).
Features[edit]
OpenEmu features a backend that uses multiple game engines while maintaining the familiar, native macOS frontend UI. It also uses modern macOS technologies such as Cocoa and Quartz.[5] A unique feature of OpenEmu is its ROM library, which allows one to import ROM files and view them in a gallery type setting, similar to iTunes. Game info and cover art can be automatically added from OpenEmu's databases.
OpenEmu includes the following features:
- High-quality Metal (formerly OpenGL) scaling, multithreaded playback, and other optimizations[6]
- Real-time 3D effects and image processing
- Graphic filters to enhance display
- Full-screen support
- Ability to play multiple ROMs at once
- Ability to scan attached disks for ROMs
- Automatic downloading of game info and cover art
- Ability to use custom cover art
- Can play ROM hacks for multiple systems.
- A fully featured library, supporting multiple views, collections (categories), and game ratings
- Optional automatic organization of ROM files within the library folder
- Full save state support, including automatic save states
- Enhanced gamepad support for USB controllers and accessibility to Bluetooth (including DualShock 3 controllers, DualShock 4 controllers, Xbox 360 controllers and Xbox One controllers)
- Custom cores for custom systems (For systems like Wii)
Compatibility[edit]
System | Core | OE Version | macOS compatibility |
---|---|---|---|
10.7–10.10 | 10.11–10.14 | ||
Arcade (experimental version) | M.A.M.E | 2.0.8 | |
Atari 2600 | Stella | 1.0.4 | |
Atari 5200 | Atari800 | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Atari 7800 | ProSystem | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Atari Lynx | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
ColecoVision | CrabEmu | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Famicom Disk System | Nestopia | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Game Boy / Color | Gambatte | 1.0 | |
Game Boy Advance | mGBA | 1.0 | |
GameCube** | Dolphin | 2.2 | Does not appear |
Game Gear | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Intellivision | Bliss | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Neo Geo Pocket / Color | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
Nintendo 64 | Mupen64Plus | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Nintendo Entertainment System | FCEUX or Nestopia* | 1.0 | |
Nintendo DS | DeSmuME | 1.0 | |
Odyssey² / Videopac+ | O2EM | 2.0 | Does not appear |
PC-FX | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sega 32X | PicoDrive | 1.0 | |
Sega CD / Mega-CD | Genesis Plus GX | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sega Genesis / Mega Drive | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Sega Master System / Mark III | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Sega Saturn | Mednafen | 2.0.6/2.0.6.1 | Does not appear |
Sega SG-1000 | Genesis Plus GX | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sony PlayStation | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sony PlayStation Portable | PPSSPP | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Super Nintendo Entertainment System | higan or Snes9x* | 1.0 | |
TurboGrafx-16 / PC Engine / SuperGrafx | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
TurboGrafx-CD / PC Engine CD | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Vectrex | VecXGL | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Virtual Boy | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
WonderSwan / Color | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
* Default core plugin.[7]
** Version 2.1 and lower must have custom system core.
Reception[edit]
Upon its 1.0 release, OpenEmu was positively received, and subject to much online press coverage, praising the software's UI, features, and ease of use.[8][9][10][11] In particular, it was praised by the gaming community for '[bringing] the idea of an emulator for a mainstream, general audience to reality'.[12]
As of August 16, 2018, OpenEmu has been downloaded over 10,000,000 times since its version 1.0 release, making it one of the most popular multi-system emulators on macOS.[13]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^https://github.com/OpenEmu/OpenEmu/releases
- ^'OpenNestopia'.
- ^'The Archive - An Emulator for the Rest of Us—How OpenEmu Changes Everything'.
- ^https://www.reddit.com/r/OpenEmu/comments/3zwu0t/32x_cd_support/
- ^'MacScene Listing'.
- ^'Create Digital Motion'.
- ^'OpenEmu Wiki - Home'. GitHub. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
- ^Thorin Klosowski (2013-12-24). 'OpenEmu Emulates Nearly Every Classic Console on Mac'. Life Hacker. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
- ^Alex Heath (2013-12-26). 'OpenEmu Is The Ultimate Old School Game Emulator For OS X'. Cult of Mac. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
- ^Andrew Cunningham (2013-12-28). 'ArsTechnica OpenEmu Hands On'. Ars Technica.
- ^Sean Hollister (2013-12-28). 'Play classic video games in style with OpenEmu for Mac'. The Verge.
- ^'OpenEmu feature on The Archive'.
- ^'Github OpenEmu Release Download Stats'.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- OpenEmu on GitHub
Emulator is the software that helps us to run multiple OS on a single hardware. It typically helps one OS to behave as another for as much amount of time as we want and then switch back to our original OS. This in turn helps people to run different apllications exclusively for various OS on a single platform. Like if you have an Windows PC emulator, or the iOS one, you can run Windows or iOS appliactions on your Mac computer, especially good for app developers.
Mac PC is now common around the world, and it's not surprising that some people would want to play game with it. But there are some games that only built for Windows, Nintendo or other devices, and hence you may need the game emulator for these games to run on Mac OS. So, here in this article, we will show you some of the best Game Console Emulators for macOS.
Tips: If you ever lost important notes or messages on iPhone, you can also use Gihosoft iPhone Data Recovery for Mac to get them back easily even without backup.
Also read: 6 Best iOS Emulator For Windows To Build & Run iOS Apps
Top 15 Gaming Emulators for Mac Computers
1. Virtual PC for Mac
This emulator by Microsoft aims to emulate Windows OS on your Mac giveing you the freedom to run those programs specifical for Windows OS that you can not use on your Mac OS.
This game emulator will successfully take out your worry about the fact that you cannot run your Windows games on Mac. This Windows emulator will work as Windows 7 version, which may be a bit outdated but still it can do your job perfectly.
Download: Virtual PC for Mac
2. XBOX 360 Emulator for Mac
As the name suggests this is an XBOX oriented emulator completely made for Mac OS. For playing XBOX games, XeMu360 emulator is the most widely used emulator. This is comparatively a new software and it does support almost all XBOX games.
This is a very powerful emulator so that Mac OS users can enjoy playing XBOX games on it flawlessly.
Download: XBOX 360 Emulator for Mac
3. Playstation Emulators for Mac
PCSX-Reloaded is one of the the best emulator that can be installed on your Mac OS ideal for playing Playstation games. As an open source software, this emulator gives you the freedom to install it on all versions of Mac OS. Things become much simpler and easier after its installation process has been modified recently.
It would be better to keep all your playstation games inside one folder on Mac. Then after installing PCSX-Reloaded all you have to do is to drop the game you want to play in it. The emulator also has a built-in BIOS and the ability to edit memory cards as well.
Download: Playstation Emulators for Mac
4. Nintendo 64 Emulator for Mac
Mupen64 is one of the well-known emulator for Nintendo 64 to use on Mac OS. This emulator is very stable and compatible with all types of Mac OS.
However, you will require to install the GTK+ for this Nitendo 64 emulator to work smoothly. GTK+ is a graphical toolkit that needs to be installed on the Mac to process graphics. GTK+ will remains in the background and rightly handles the graphics of the N64 ROMS on Mac.
Download: Nintendo 64 Emulator for Mac
5. GameCube and Wii Games Emulator for Mac
Dolphin is one of the best game emulator for macOS to run GameCube, Wii and Triforce games. This emulator is very much compatible with multiple platforms including the macOS. It is also free to use as an open source project. The emulator works well with macOS 10.6 to 10.8 and is very user friendly as well.
The only thing the user needs to do is to specifiy the BIOS file which comes always with the ROM. When you start playing the game, Dolphin emulator automatically senses the game file and starts playing it on Mac.
Download: GameCube and Wii Games Emulator for Mac
6. OpenEmu
OpenEmu emulator is one of the most reliable emulators in the market, compatible with Mac OS 10.7 and higher. Being very user friendly, it also has an iTunes type menu. This is the ultimate gaming emulator that detects the game Roms according to their requirement.
OpenEmu – How To Run Emulators on a Mac N64 PSP SNES NES And More!
OpenEmu supports a great number of consoles like:
- Game Boy
- NeoGeo Pocket
- Game Gear
- Sega Genesis and lot more
Download: OpenEmu
7. RetroArch
RetroArch seems to be an all-in-one emulator for macOS that helps the users to play any kind of retro games. The emulator even can be used to play PlayStation 1 games and older ones as well. In the handheld game console RetroArch even supports Game Boy Advance games. It is totally based on the number of cores with each of the core emulating a console.
Download: RetroArch
8. PPSSPP
The name PPSSPP stands for Playstation Portable Simulator Suitable for Playing Portably, which is an emulator for playing PSP games. The emulator was originally created by Dolphin developers and is widely used across the globe. PPSSPP is very easy to install and to use on Mac, and also it supports a wide number of PSP games.
Download: PPSSPP
9. ScummVM
This emulator is speifically designed for those people who like to play point-and-click games. SucmmVM is supported by macOS and uses the Scumm scripting language shown as its name. The emulator also supports many of the adventure games like the Monkey Island 1-3, Sam & Max and much more.
Download: ScummVM
10. DeSmuME
DeSmuMe is another emulator for macOS that helps users to play with the dual screens of Nintendo, i.e. by simulating dual screens on the monitor itself. The emulator also supports games that we want play on the devices sideways.
The best part of this emulator is that its constantly being modified by developers and new features are getting added to it on a regular basis. And now over the years this has become one of the best game emulators for Mac in the market.
Download: DeSmuME
11. DosBox
As the name suggests this emulator is purposefuly made for DOS based programs. Many DOS based games are still played by users; so to make those games available even on macOS this emulator has been created.
Download: DosBox
12. Xamarian Android Player for Mac
This is an Android emulator that can be run on macOS so that you can play the millions of Android games onto your Mac. Xamarain Android player also supports OpenGL and actually virtualizes the device instead of simply emulating it.
Original author(s) | Josh Weinberg |
---|---|
Developer(s) | OpenEmu Team |
Stable release | |
Repository | |
Written in | Objective-C |
Operating system | macOS |
Size | 74.0 MB |
Available in | English |
Type | Video Game Emulator |
License | BSD |
Website | openemu.org |
OpenEmu is an open-source multi-system game emulator designed for macOS. It provides a plugin interface to emulate numerous consoles' hardware, such as the Nintendo Entertainment System, Genesis, Game Boy, and many more. The architecture allows for other developers to add new cores to the base system without the need to account for specific macOS APIs.
Version 1.0 was released on December 23, 2013, after a lengthy beta testing period.[1] Numerous incremental updates have been released since then, with plans to incorporate support for more consoles in future releases. Some of these in-development cores are available to download in an optional 'experimental' cores build (released alongside the regular, 'standard' version), containing support for arcade systems using MAME.
History[edit]
Beginnings[edit]
openwas first released on Wednesday, July 4th, 2007 as OpenNestopia, a Cocoa-port written by Josh Weinberg for then Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger of the NES/Famicom emulator Nestopia (written by Martin Freij).[2] Weinberg and his friend, Ben Devacel, began searching for more developers to port other emulators to macOS, which led to the name change to OpenEmu in 2009, to better describe the multi-system emulator.[3]
1.0[edit]
OpenEmu 1.0 released on Monday, December 23, 2013 with 12 'cores' emulating Nintendo, Sega, NEC, and SNK's home, tabletop, and [[HanOpenEmu 1.0 needed Mac OS X Lion (10.7.x) to run. A Wednesday, October 15, 2014 (296 days later) midstream update to the OpenEmu library (1.0.4) would introduce Stella, a core emulating the 2600, a 2nd generation cosole from Atari.
2.0[edit]
Introduced on Wednesday, Dec 23, 2015, (exactly two years after 1.0) OpenEmu 2.0 was released. OpenEmu 2.0 began requiring a minimum of OS X El Capitan 10.11, dropping support for Mac OS X Lion (10.7.x) through OS X Yosemite (10.10.x). OpenEmu 2.0 introduced 16 new cores along with hundreds of bug fixes and lesser features. The new cores added several 2nd generation cores, support for optical media-based-image games, additionally emulating systems from Sony, Mattel, Bandai, Magnavox, Milton-Bradley, and Coleco. Another midsteam update, 2.0.6.1, released Tuesday, Dec 19, 2017 (727 days after 2.0) added support for Mednafen's Sega Saturn branch, with a suggested quad-core i7 CPU to emulate.
2.1 and 2.2[edit]
OpenEmu 2.1 (Friday, October 15, 2019, 675 days after version 2.0.6.1; 'coincidentally,' exactly 5 years after the 1.0.4 Stella update) was significant, not for any new cores, but for supporting Metal, Apple's visual API successor to OpenGL and OpenCl, giving OpenEmu significant gains in both performance and battery life.
OpenEmu 2.2 (Friday December 27, 2019, 63 days later) added support for a downstream, Metal-forked version of Dolphin's GameCubebranch, building on 2.1's foundation. This brings OpenEmu's number of supported cores to 31.
Limitations[edit]
32X Hybrid Games[edit]
As confirmed by the OpenEmu developers on their official subreddit, Sega 32X-CD hybrid games (versions of games that could use a 32X cartridge and Sega CD at once, such as Night Trap, Corpse Killer, and Fahrenheit) are not supported. Users are prompted with a 'This game requires the Sega 32X attachment' error if attempted.[4]
GameCube Limitations[edit]
At present, GameCube emulation doesn't support Save States (due to continual updates breaking compatibility with saved states); users are encouraged to use in-game saves.
OpenEmu GameCube emulation also does not support the [multi-disc GameCube titles] at present (despite the main Dolphin branch doing so).
Features[edit]
OpenEmu features a backend that uses multiple game engines while maintaining the familiar, native macOS frontend UI. It also uses modern macOS technologies such as Cocoa and Quartz.[5] A unique feature of OpenEmu is its ROM library, which allows one to import ROM files and view them in a gallery type setting, similar to iTunes. Game info and cover art can be automatically added from OpenEmu's databases.
OpenEmu includes the following features:
- High-quality Metal (formerly OpenGL) scaling, multithreaded playback, and other optimizations[6]
- Real-time 3D effects and image processing
- Graphic filters to enhance display
- Full-screen support
- Ability to play multiple ROMs at once
- Ability to scan attached disks for ROMs
- Automatic downloading of game info and cover art
- Ability to use custom cover art
- Can play ROM hacks for multiple systems.
- A fully featured library, supporting multiple views, collections (categories), and game ratings
- Optional automatic organization of ROM files within the library folder
- Full save state support, including automatic save states
- Enhanced gamepad support for USB controllers and accessibility to Bluetooth (including DualShock 3 controllers, DualShock 4 controllers, Xbox 360 controllers and Xbox One controllers)
- Custom cores for custom systems (For systems like Wii)
Compatibility[edit]
System | Core | OE Version | macOS compatibility |
---|---|---|---|
10.7–10.10 | 10.11–10.14 | ||
Arcade (experimental version) | M.A.M.E | 2.0.8 | |
Atari 2600 | Stella | 1.0.4 | |
Atari 5200 | Atari800 | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Atari 7800 | ProSystem | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Atari Lynx | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
ColecoVision | CrabEmu | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Famicom Disk System | Nestopia | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Game Boy / Color | Gambatte | 1.0 | |
Game Boy Advance | mGBA | 1.0 | |
GameCube** | Dolphin | 2.2 | Does not appear |
Game Gear | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Intellivision | Bliss | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Neo Geo Pocket / Color | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
Nintendo 64 | Mupen64Plus | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Nintendo Entertainment System | FCEUX or Nestopia* | 1.0 | |
Nintendo DS | DeSmuME | 1.0 | |
Odyssey² / Videopac+ | O2EM | 2.0 | Does not appear |
PC-FX | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sega 32X | PicoDrive | 1.0 | |
Sega CD / Mega-CD | Genesis Plus GX | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sega Genesis / Mega Drive | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Sega Master System / Mark III | Genesis Plus GX | 1.0 | |
Sega Saturn | Mednafen | 2.0.6/2.0.6.1 | Does not appear |
Sega SG-1000 | Genesis Plus GX | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sony PlayStation | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Sony PlayStation Portable | PPSSPP | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Super Nintendo Entertainment System | higan or Snes9x* | 1.0 | |
TurboGrafx-16 / PC Engine / SuperGrafx | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
TurboGrafx-CD / PC Engine CD | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Vectrex | VecXGL | 2.0 | Does not appear |
Virtual Boy | Mednafen | 1.0 | |
WonderSwan / Color | Mednafen | 2.0 | Does not appear |
* Default core plugin.[7]
** Version 2.1 and lower must have custom system core.
Reception[edit]
Upon its 1.0 release, OpenEmu was positively received, and subject to much online press coverage, praising the software's UI, features, and ease of use.[8][9][10][11] In particular, it was praised by the gaming community for '[bringing] the idea of an emulator for a mainstream, general audience to reality'.[12]
As of August 16, 2018, OpenEmu has been downloaded over 10,000,000 times since its version 1.0 release, making it one of the most popular multi-system emulators on macOS.[13]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^https://github.com/OpenEmu/OpenEmu/releases
- ^'OpenNestopia'.
- ^'The Archive - An Emulator for the Rest of Us—How OpenEmu Changes Everything'.
- ^https://www.reddit.com/r/OpenEmu/comments/3zwu0t/32x_cd_support/
- ^'MacScene Listing'.
- ^'Create Digital Motion'.
- ^'OpenEmu Wiki - Home'. GitHub. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
- ^Thorin Klosowski (2013-12-24). 'OpenEmu Emulates Nearly Every Classic Console on Mac'. Life Hacker. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
- ^Alex Heath (2013-12-26). 'OpenEmu Is The Ultimate Old School Game Emulator For OS X'. Cult of Mac. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
- ^Andrew Cunningham (2013-12-28). 'ArsTechnica OpenEmu Hands On'. Ars Technica.
- ^Sean Hollister (2013-12-28). 'Play classic video games in style with OpenEmu for Mac'. The Verge.
- ^'OpenEmu feature on The Archive'.
- ^'Github OpenEmu Release Download Stats'.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- OpenEmu on GitHub
Emulator is the software that helps us to run multiple OS on a single hardware. It typically helps one OS to behave as another for as much amount of time as we want and then switch back to our original OS. This in turn helps people to run different apllications exclusively for various OS on a single platform. Like if you have an Windows PC emulator, or the iOS one, you can run Windows or iOS appliactions on your Mac computer, especially good for app developers.
Mac PC is now common around the world, and it's not surprising that some people would want to play game with it. But there are some games that only built for Windows, Nintendo or other devices, and hence you may need the game emulator for these games to run on Mac OS. So, here in this article, we will show you some of the best Game Console Emulators for macOS.
Tips: If you ever lost important notes or messages on iPhone, you can also use Gihosoft iPhone Data Recovery for Mac to get them back easily even without backup.
Also read: 6 Best iOS Emulator For Windows To Build & Run iOS Apps
Top 15 Gaming Emulators for Mac Computers
1. Virtual PC for Mac
This emulator by Microsoft aims to emulate Windows OS on your Mac giveing you the freedom to run those programs specifical for Windows OS that you can not use on your Mac OS.
This game emulator will successfully take out your worry about the fact that you cannot run your Windows games on Mac. This Windows emulator will work as Windows 7 version, which may be a bit outdated but still it can do your job perfectly.
Download: Virtual PC for Mac
2. XBOX 360 Emulator for Mac
As the name suggests this is an XBOX oriented emulator completely made for Mac OS. For playing XBOX games, XeMu360 emulator is the most widely used emulator. This is comparatively a new software and it does support almost all XBOX games.
This is a very powerful emulator so that Mac OS users can enjoy playing XBOX games on it flawlessly.
Download: XBOX 360 Emulator for Mac
3. Playstation Emulators for Mac
PCSX-Reloaded is one of the the best emulator that can be installed on your Mac OS ideal for playing Playstation games. As an open source software, this emulator gives you the freedom to install it on all versions of Mac OS. Things become much simpler and easier after its installation process has been modified recently.
It would be better to keep all your playstation games inside one folder on Mac. Then after installing PCSX-Reloaded all you have to do is to drop the game you want to play in it. The emulator also has a built-in BIOS and the ability to edit memory cards as well.
Download: Playstation Emulators for Mac
4. Nintendo 64 Emulator for Mac
Mupen64 is one of the well-known emulator for Nintendo 64 to use on Mac OS. This emulator is very stable and compatible with all types of Mac OS.
However, you will require to install the GTK+ for this Nitendo 64 emulator to work smoothly. GTK+ is a graphical toolkit that needs to be installed on the Mac to process graphics. GTK+ will remains in the background and rightly handles the graphics of the N64 ROMS on Mac.
Download: Nintendo 64 Emulator for Mac
5. GameCube and Wii Games Emulator for Mac
Dolphin is one of the best game emulator for macOS to run GameCube, Wii and Triforce games. This emulator is very much compatible with multiple platforms including the macOS. It is also free to use as an open source project. The emulator works well with macOS 10.6 to 10.8 and is very user friendly as well.
The only thing the user needs to do is to specifiy the BIOS file which comes always with the ROM. When you start playing the game, Dolphin emulator automatically senses the game file and starts playing it on Mac.
Download: GameCube and Wii Games Emulator for Mac
6. OpenEmu
OpenEmu emulator is one of the most reliable emulators in the market, compatible with Mac OS 10.7 and higher. Being very user friendly, it also has an iTunes type menu. This is the ultimate gaming emulator that detects the game Roms according to their requirement.
OpenEmu – How To Run Emulators on a Mac N64 PSP SNES NES And More!
OpenEmu supports a great number of consoles like:
- Game Boy
- NeoGeo Pocket
- Game Gear
- Sega Genesis and lot more
Download: OpenEmu
7. RetroArch
RetroArch seems to be an all-in-one emulator for macOS that helps the users to play any kind of retro games. The emulator even can be used to play PlayStation 1 games and older ones as well. In the handheld game console RetroArch even supports Game Boy Advance games. It is totally based on the number of cores with each of the core emulating a console.
Download: RetroArch
8. PPSSPP
The name PPSSPP stands for Playstation Portable Simulator Suitable for Playing Portably, which is an emulator for playing PSP games. The emulator was originally created by Dolphin developers and is widely used across the globe. PPSSPP is very easy to install and to use on Mac, and also it supports a wide number of PSP games.
Download: PPSSPP
9. ScummVM
This emulator is speifically designed for those people who like to play point-and-click games. SucmmVM is supported by macOS and uses the Scumm scripting language shown as its name. The emulator also supports many of the adventure games like the Monkey Island 1-3, Sam & Max and much more.
Download: ScummVM
10. DeSmuME
DeSmuMe is another emulator for macOS that helps users to play with the dual screens of Nintendo, i.e. by simulating dual screens on the monitor itself. The emulator also supports games that we want play on the devices sideways.
The best part of this emulator is that its constantly being modified by developers and new features are getting added to it on a regular basis. And now over the years this has become one of the best game emulators for Mac in the market.
Download: DeSmuME
11. DosBox
As the name suggests this emulator is purposefuly made for DOS based programs. Many DOS based games are still played by users; so to make those games available even on macOS this emulator has been created.
Download: DosBox
12. Xamarian Android Player for Mac
This is an Android emulator that can be run on macOS so that you can play the millions of Android games onto your Mac. Xamarain Android player also supports OpenGL and actually virtualizes the device instead of simply emulating it.
Nes Emulators For Mac Os X 10.10
This also helps to enhance the performance of your Mac. The emulator has a great integration with both the Visual Studio and the Xamarin Studio, and this one has a native user interface.
Download: Xamarian Android Player for Mac
13. PS3 Emulator for Mac
PS3 emulator typically supports macOS and allows users to play PlayStation 3 games on Mac. It is completely free and only need you to have any PS3 supported game. This gives complete freedom for users to choose whatever PS3 game they want to play on their Mac.
Download: PS3 Emulator for Mac
14. iOS Emulator iPadian for Mac
As its name suggests, this is an emulator that helps you run iOS applications on your Mac. By downloading this simulator, users can use iPad applications on a Mac as well. The best iOS emulator currently available is the iPadian.
This emulator is based on Adobe AIR and readily creates an interface similar to iPad on your Mac. iPadian is a very good emulator if you are just looking to run iOS appliactios and games on your Mac flawlessly.
Download: iOS Emulator iPadian for Mac
Mac Os Emulator For Pc
15. Visual Boy Advance
The Visual Boy Advance, also known to be the Mac Boy advance, can play almost all games of the Nintendo consoles on Mac. This GBA is written and developed specifically for the OS X and is compatibile with almost all kinds of macOS.
Download: Visual Boy Advance
So, here are our top 15 picks of game consloe emulators that you can readily download onto your Mac and seamlessly enjoy Android, DOS, Windows, iOS and much more experiences. By this way, you do not have to buy other kinds of OS, but just an emulator that will help you to run other applications on the single macOS.
Each of these emulators for Mac has its own advantage, and gaming on them is another treat to be honest. With such wide variety of support for games, you can download each of them and find out your favorite one and play all along. If you have any other good suggestion or question, welcome to comment down.