Custom Search Arnold 1.7.9 Amstrad CPC/CPC+ Emulator Arnold is an extremely precise Amstrad CPC/CPC+ emulator, which can run just about all software available for what was without question the best home computer available in Europe in the 1980s. License: Freeware.
READ FULL DESCRIPTION, LIKE IF THIS HELPS!!!!! Quick vid showing the settings to run PCSX2 on El Capitan OSX. Im using Wineskin to run the Win Version, cause the Mac version is very limited.
Developer/Publisher: Ported by Richard Bannister. Modification Date: March 10, 2018. Requirements: Mac OS X 10.11 or higher - 64-bit File Size: 726 Kb Atari800MacX 4.6 This is the the Macintosh OSX Port of David Firth's Fantastic Atari 800 Emulator. Ported is the SDL version of the Atrari800 emulator to Mac OSX, and added a full native Cocoa interface, including Preferences, Menus, File Associations, Help and more. License: Freeware. Developer/Publisher: Mark Grebe.
Modification Date: December 29, 2011. Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4 or higher - 32-bit File Size: 5.5 MB Basilisk II 1.0 Basilisk II is an open source emulator of 68xxx-based Macintosh computers for Windows, OS X and Linux. With Basilisk II, one can boot Mac OS versions 7.x through 8.1. Ports of Basilisk II are available for Mac OS X, Windows, Linux and a number of lesser known systems. Users require a Macintosh ROM image and a copy of Mac OS to use with the emulator.
License: Freeware. Developer/Publisher: Ported by Christian Bauer et al. Modification Date: July 11, 2018.
Requirements: Mac OS X 10.7 or higher - 64-bit File Size: 6.1 MB Boxer 1.4 Boxer is a DOS game emulator for OS X, built around the powerful DOSBox. Boxer aims to make it easy and painless to play your DOS games.
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1.0, an open source project designed to bring game emulation to OS X, has officially launched following a beta testing period. Though there are other emulator options for OS X, OpenEmu has been designed from the ground up for OS X. For the first time, the ‘It just works’ philosophy now extends to open source video game emulation on the Mac. With OpenEmu, it is extremely easy to add, browse, organize and with a compatible gamepad, play those favorite games (ROMs) you already own.OpenEmu is able to emulate the hardware of several different consoles, including several 16-bit systems like the Game Boy, GameBoy Color, Game Boy Advance, Game Gear, NeoGeo Pocket, Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis, and Super Nintendo, among others. The emulator features a native OS X interface with a design that mirrors iTunes, offering up ROMs in a unified card-style menu organized by system.
OpenEmu includes full save state support, allowing multiple ROMs to be played at once, and it also provides OpenGL scaling, multithreaded playback, and gamepad support. Multiple controllers are supported, including console controllers from Nintendo, Xbox, and PlayStation, along with gamepads from Gravis, Logitech, and more. OpenEmu can currently be downloaded from the for free. Legally, however, it is different.
Then your country's laws are as stupid as the people that make them.