


The CPU in that first laptop though it may boost higher and is 2.7ghz but all the overhead on emulation just means it will barely run Yuzu at any decent speeds. It's 4 Cores at 1.9ghz with custom Nvidia GPU built in. The reason is you are using software to emulate the hardware and it is also translating code written for ARM into X86 architecture. Here's the nuts and bolts of it Emulation typically takes hardware you are emulating on to be multiple times more powerful than the original hardware. None of them will run Yuzu at full speed they will all have varying levels of success. In regards to the PCs you listed specifically. I tried to attempt running a game with mods that makes the game to 60 fps in a very low end PC. There were Intel Core i3 chipsets produced now that have 4 cores and 8 threads, and some Intel Pentium, Celeron, and Atom chips that have 4 cores 4 threads. It has 4 cores but was a 3rd gen Intel processor. I see another laptop with an Intel Core i7-3xxx built in it. There is no GPU for this computer, so the chip includes a dedicated GPU instead.

I see a computer with an Intel Core i3-5xx chip, but I haven't tested it yet. But my CPU is much older and is lower-end. The minimum requirements said that an AMD Ryor Intel Core i5-4xxx series CPU or later is used to achieve performance. I think my laptop has a CPU that has two threads (like my computer's AMD A6-4400M chip) and I don't know if this works when running this emulator. I'm using a laptop that has an AMD chip in it (it was an A series APU). Downvotes are only supposed to be used for comments that do not contribute to the ongoing discussion / thread.ĭo not post about playing games on yuzu which haven't been released yet. This subreddit is only for yuzu and it's development.ĭon't be a jerk. Please view the quickstart guide down below for approximate system requirements. "Can my PC with x specs run yuzu?" threads should be kept at minimum. A guide on dumping keys and system archives can be found in the quickstart guide down below. Discussions about warez, downloading games and shader caches may result in a ban. Yuzu requires you to own a Switch and the games. The emulator is currently booting quite a few commercial titles, including some 3D rendered ones.

It is written in C++ with portability in mind, with builds actively maintained for Windows, Linux and macOS. Yuzu (lower case 'y') is an experimental open-source emulator for the Nintendo Switch from the creators of Citra.
