![]() We will have to wait and see-for now, Yuzu does not run any commercial games. The development team did a great job with Citra, and given that the Switch is based on familiar hardware, there is reason to believe that Yuzu will turn out just as good. There is reason to be optimistic though, if you are into this sort of thing. Developers and hackers alike are now very much familiar with the Tegra X1.Īs for what Yuzu will ultimately bring to the table, that remains to be seen. Part of the reason why something like Yuzu can exist (and arrive so quickly) is because Nintendo opted to use NVIDIA's Tegra X1 hardware platform for the Switch, rather than its own proprietary hardware. "The emulator is currently only useful for homebrew development and researcher purposes." "It is written in C++ with portability in mind, with builds actively maintained for Windows, Linux, and macOS," the Yuzu team states. Nevertheless, it's here, albeit the initial release is based on experimental open-source code. ![]() This moment was inevitable, though most people probably did not expect a Switch emulator to arrive so quickly after the hybrid game console's launch just 10 months. The developers behind the popular 3DS emulator Citra have now announced an emulator for the Nintendo Switch called Yuzu. ![]()
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