The last time I tried emulation on a desktop PC, whether it was Windows or Linux, I had to install each emulator separately. It was a bit of a mess.

On my Steam Deck, Emudeck made it stupid easy. Retroarch wasn’t terrible, but was a bit more irritating and buggy for me to get working. Either way, it had a bunch of emulators all in one spot so I didn’t have to go hunting for a ton of them. Are there solutions like this for Linux as well now? What about for Windows or something like a RetroPIE?

24 points
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22 points

Depending what systems you want to emulate, just use ares.

https://ares-emu.net

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2 points

This looks similar to retroarch. Is it better? How?

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9 points

It’s not retroarch. If you have been in emulation for a while that’s enough right there. No one is reusing retroarch cores here.

https://emulation.gametechwiki.com/index.php/Ares

If you don’t want to spend 3 hours setting up an emulator, ares is basically just: open software, click to open what you want to play. The interface isn’t trying to reinvent a weird ps3 or Switch hybrid on your pc. It is similar to regular desktop software ui you might have used during your life.

Ares was developed by Near (rip). If you don’t know who that is, it’s a shame, but I’m not going to go into it here. It’s now maintained by people continuing Near’s work on trying to achieve cycle accurate, preservation quality emulation.

Some of the emulation cores, SNES, 32x, N64, MegaDrive and Sega CD are the best in class, by a wide margin. Turbografx is comparable if not better than mednafen. SNES especially good since that was Near’s main focus for many years - you might know it as bsnes or higan from before they started pushing the ares emulator more before they died.

Some systems are definitely best played elsewhere (mgba is better for gba, Stella is better for 2600, Duckstation for ps1, Sameboy for gameboy colour). But that defeats the purpose of your question. For the sake of having all the emulation in one place, ares usually do fine with these.

It can be taxing. If you are running an older underpowered machine, you might not have a good time.

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9 points

Ares was developed by Near (rip).

I’ll never quit being angry that the most brilliant mind in emulation was driven to suicide by organized cyberbullying.

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12 points

Like RetroArch?

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1 point

OP mentioned trying retroarch, and that it was not too bad, but wondering if there are alternatives.

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10 points

you can install emudeck on any regular linux distro

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8 points

I think Emudeck is available as a Flatpak, so you should be able to install it on your desktop too.

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14 points
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It is not, you may be confusing it with retrodeck, which is solely distributed as a flatpak.

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-2 points

Oh really? Boo.

Retrodeck looks good, but the recommended install instructions were just too nutty for me: curl https://... | bash is not ok.

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6 points
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0 points

You can download and read the installer script

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0 points

You…can just download the script and inspect it yourself before running. This cargo cult “security” advice needs to stop.

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