![snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/yBq2PGXZEyw/hqdefault.jpg)
It's way better to support tinkering than to require it. *are practically useful without requiring tinkering
![snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck](https://i.imgur.com/S0r7k8R.png)
*have a link port that enourages peer-to-peer sharing
#SNES EMULATOR FOR MAC THAT DOESNT SUCK SOFTWARE#
*have a massive base of ticklish software and games *are standardised and mandatory in high school math Graphing calculators are equipped with basically the same hardware as a Game Boy, plus they: It's nearly the perfect formula, lacking only a backing company committed heart and soul to openness. TI's educational graphing calculator line is the closest thing to ideal I've ever seen. It might be hard to hear, but the "inspiration" factor of a Game Boy nowadays is minimal - the kids you're targeting have probably never seen one, and would be unimpressed if they did, having been reared on iThingies. Teacher: "Your game is really running on the same physical hardware as a GBA!" It'd be lovely to use those new multi-Gbit wireless standards instead of a cable though. With VT-d, PCI-passthrough, and the ridiculous amount of CPU cores everything comes with that this should be a more normal thing in the future. It's easy to manage the VM, snapshot it, and change the config without even touching the arcade now. This works so much better than dealing with moving games on/off a SD card, and managing more physical things. A long VGA/USB/audio cable later, and my arcade is now running directly off a VM from my desktop. I realized my main desktop computer (a Core i7-4790k) is plenty powerful to do some arcade gaming on the side. So when the arcade computer failed, I tried a different route. And as others have noted, it's prolly going to suck for NES/SNES emulation.
![snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck snes emulator for mac that doesnt suck](https://cdnb.c3dt.com/preview/883044-com.wliquid.an64plus.jpg)
I tried the Rasberry Pi route awhile ago, it does fine on the oldest 80's MAME games, but has issues with most of the 90's era games of which I'm still quite fond. I've had an arcade cabinet with a 9-year old computer in it that finally failed the other day.