This may well be a stupid question, but I'm going to ask it anyway. I have an Ultrabook as a 2nd PC (in addition to my gaming rig) and I have been looking into downloading a GBA emulator to play some of the old Pokemon games while away on holiday.
The specs are: 1.4Ghz Intel i3-2367m Dual-Core CPU (4 threads) 2GB RAM 64GB SSD Would this be able to run the emulator or not? The reason I am asking is I have seen some posts stating that that emulators use a lot of CPU power. PS: The consensus seems to be that Visual Boy Advance is the best emulator to use. Does anyone support or refute that?
This may well be a stupid question, but I'm going to ask it anyway. I have an Ultrabook as a 2nd PC (in addition to my gaming rig) and I have been looking into downloading a GBA emulator to play some of the old Pokemon games while away on holiday. The specs are: 1.4Ghz Intel i3-2367m Dual-Core CPU (4 threads) 2GB RAM 64GB SSD Would this be able to run the emulator or not? The reason I am asking is I have seen some posts stating that that emulators use a lot of CPU power. PS: The consensus seems to be that Visual Boy Advance is the best emulator to use.
Does anyone support or refute that? My computer is on par with yours and I can run VisualBoyAdvance just fine. The worst I've encountered was dropping to 20FPS.
Visual Boy Advance has long since become Open Source. This spawned several variants so we will try to list as many as we can here. Gameboy Emulation Visual Boy Advance can just like a real Gameboy Advance also play original Gameboy (Color) games. So there is no need to get a separate emulator.
Because of this the author has stopped development of his 'normal' Gameboy emulator Visual Boy. System Requirements As with most emulators for Windows you may need to install the latest version of. User Rating Vote Rating: (3857 Votes) Rate it.