![]() The first release version of BSNES required a 4.0 Ghz processor, but later releases may have been able to reduce this requirement while the mainstream processors caught up a bit. While this provides a more consistent experience between users, it comes at the cost of extremely high system requirements. This "Good Enough" approach is why this emulator has become prominent & effectively the "Gold Standard" for SNES emulators.īSNES (& Higan) was designed to be a "cycle accurate" emulator that tries to mimic the SNES hardware as closely as possible without any shortcuts. Such types of emulators (which includes ZSNES, which is the common alternative to SNES9X) are typically popular options since they provide a lot of options & features while being accessible to most hardware. ![]() There can also be some incompatibility with some SNES games that utilize some more niche chips or complex game code that the emulator may not properly handle consistently (giving some graphical glitches or something), but the majority of games will work just fine (hitting like 97.000 - 99.999% compatibility - You can see a list of some issues at as an example). While it allowed users to use weaker hardware (like 350 Mhz Pentium II processor with 256 MB of RAM) at the cost of execution accuracy by utilizing some shortcuts that can cause some unintended randomness or glitches in games, but is "close enough" for most users. SNES9X was designed to be an emulator that focused on maximum library compatibility with moderate PC hardware. It's more of a debate between "Library Compatibility" vs "Execution Accuracy".
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