- cross-posted to:
- retro_gaming@discuss.online
- cross-posted to:
- retro_gaming@discuss.online
Although often tossed together into a singular ‘retro game’ aesthetic, the first game consoles that focused on 3D graphics like the Nintendo 64 and Sony PlayStation featured very distinct visuals that make these different systems easy to distinguish. Yet whereas the N64 mostly suffered from a small texture buffer, the PS’s weak graphics hardware necessitated compromises that led to the highly defining jittery and wobbly PlayStation graphics. …
Which emulator fixes the wobbling and upscales the textures again? The games I’ve seen in that emulator look great, nearly as good as PS2 games.
Any emulator that supports PGXP, which is most of them. Duckstation is the one most people recommend, but that one has weird licensing issues and a dev who loves to start drama.
https://emulation.gametechwiki.com/index.php/PlayStation_emulators
Excellent; thanks for the heads up. I’ll avoid the drama and pirate any component that requires a licensing fee.
Here is a GPL licensed one that was forked before the license change. Not as feature rich, but definitely still a quality emulator: https://github.com/Trixarian/duckstation-gpl
3D graphics were incredibly primitive back then. There really weren’t “3D processors” as we know them today.
On top of that, CRTs masked many of the weirdest graphical artifacts - the shimmering we see on modern screens was much more of a blur on screens at the time.
It’s fun to look back at the PlayStation and the N64, and to see how each of them handled limitations in a different way.
Resident evil for N64 is mind boggling how they were able to shrink it down enough to fit on that tiny rom chip.
Gimme that wobble and the glow of a CRT and y’all can keep your fancy HD
It wasn’t the CRT giving the PS1 its unique look. It was a lack of floating point integers.
Floating point numbers. Floating point integer is an oxymoron 🤓
Not a problem for me. How about an article on how devs release shittier, messier, harder to use GUIs every goddamn release. I swear its like four buttons to power it off.




