so between Delta (limited but very polished emulator suite) and RetroArch (huge, highly customizable, popular emulator suite) i feel like iOS is catching up to being a decent retro-game platform
i’m very curious how N64 and PSP performance is, since you can’t use JIT compilation on iOS
holy shit, RetroArch is officially on the iOS App Store now, with an Apple TV version as well https://apps.apple.com/us/app/retroarch/id6499539433
oh, hm, seems like the Miyoo A30 isn’t going for the same kind of target as the Anbernic RG28XX (the other video i linked the other day). kind of a shame TBH https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b3x4J9XQo-4
good news: Miyoo released a new device, it’s tiny, it’s adorable, it has an analog stick, it can probably run a lot of systems
bad news: in true Miyoo fashion, it’s being released in small batches and immediately sold out https://www.aliexpress.us/item/3256806688793058.html?gatewayAdapt=glo2usa
I’m looking at getting a #miyoominiplus to play some games on the train because 1) I hate mobile phone games and 2) I want to get back into #retroemulation.
I’ve found a lovely start-up guide, which pointed me to itch.io’s #indiegame section.
Oh my gosh, I didn’t know there was an indie #gameboy dev scene. I didn’t know this was all a thing.
I kind of want to learn how to make video games now.
Which company is better in terms of handheld consoles? I'm willing to buy myself a retro console and I'm not sure which overall experience is better - Retroid or Miyoo? Or maybe you know other (better) choices for a retro emulation? Help me out!
Full EU megadrive set running at full speed on my iPod Classic replacement.
Running MD.EMU from Robert Broglia
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.explusalpha.MdEmu
A brilliant combination of new 8core android hardware and retro 16bit games.