N64 emulation: better than the real thing

n64emu_20080311.jpg

Racketboy has a great article showing off some of the capabilities of the modern N64 emulator. If your machine is fast enough, most of the available emulators will really give you a noticeable resolution boost and better looking anti-aliased models. Using the Rice Video plugin with the Project64 emulator, you can even swap out the textures for some games with user-created texture packs.

I still use the real hardware (is the N64 considered "retro" now?), so before seeing this, I hadn't even considered emulation for this platform. That all changed when I saw the Mario64 mod shown above. The selection of available emulators is impressive, and there are open source emulators available for just about every platform. I'm currently playing a game under Mupen64 on my iMac and it's pretty flawless. My only wish is that all computers came, by default, with a nice joystick like they did back in the 80s.

Enhance N64 Graphics With Emulation Plugins & Texture Packs - Link
Project64 Emulator - Link
Rice Video Plugin - Link
Mupen64 Emulator (cross-platform, open source) - Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Mar 11, 2008 10:35 PM
Gaming, Linux, Mac, Retro Gaming, Virtualization, Windows | Permalink | Comments (3) Bookmark and Share

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Posted by: Max on March 12, 2008 at 8:25 AM

I too had never considered running a N64 emulator (I mean the real thing isn't "that" old.) I had this project booked marked for a while now and it appears to finally be time to build it... http://www.raphnet.net/electronique/gc_n64_usb/index_en.php


Posted by: Chris Napoli on March 13, 2008 at 1:22 AM

For Mac OS X, I recommend SixtyForce developed by Gerrit Goosen:

http://www.sixtyforce.com/

He is actively updating the project, and it runs native on Intel Macs, unlike Mupen64.



Posted by: ChrisNapoli on March 13, 2008 at 4:40 PM

I made a mistake in my first post: Mupen64 is a Universal Binary, so it does run natively on Intel Macs.

But it still doesn't appear to be updated since 2005, and is very buggy.


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