![]() ![]() The necessary plug-ins are all there but you are still going to need a BIOS dump. The PCSXR is another popular PS1 emulator which is relatively easier to set up than the PCSXR. This PS1 emulator is compatible with many games but it needs a BIOS configuration and is difficult to set up, which is why the PCSXR is a better option. You would need these features to make the PS1 emulator compatible with the hardware settings of your computer or laptop, also depending on the operating system version you are using. This PS1 emulator allows you to configure different sound setting, CD-ROM emulation and GPU optimization. It is developed on the emulation of the PSemu program. In other words, regardless of what operating system you use, you can use this PS1 emulator without any trouble. The PCSXR PS1 emulator is compatible with Microsoft Windows systems, iOS devices and Linux operating system. The PCSXR comes equipped with all systems and configurations that allow you to plug and play PlayStation games on your desktop or laptop. If you do not have the PlayStation gaming console in the first place, you wouldn’t have a way of getting the BIOS dump on your own to plug into the PS1 emulator. You may use it for your own purposes but you cannot distribute. You may be aware that it is illegal to copy games and distribute them. There are several advantages of this PS1 emulator and the most significant of them all is that you do not need a PlayStation BIOS dump. It was first released in 2000 and the latest stable version had been released in August. There are many types of PS1 emulator, developed by various companies and some have been around for more than a decade now. The only difference would be that instead of using the joysticks and gamepads, you would be using the keyboards and keypads to play the game. PS1 emulator is typically a software application that uses the PlayStation program on a desktop or laptop which enables you to play the games as you would have played on PlayStation 1. Thanks for bringing this to my attention.Using a PS1 emulator you can play Sony PlayStation games without actually buying the console or the games. There's still a chance that it'll fail on sharp sounds but it looks right for now. It'd be worth tagging a note into the spu plugin notebook. Just have to try a bunch of stuff out until something sticks.Ĭould you also mention the game? (it sounds familiar). Which doesn't seem quite right but that is r1.Įither way, I'll fix this one since I had it working before. If both fail, then I have to shutdown the channel immediately. My impression is that #2 will be okay - the instrument seems to release too long (like a slow-dying sound). Over the years, development changed hands several times with PCSX-Reloaded (PCSXR) now being the main version. They should just be save state plug 'n play. PCSX is a free and open-source, video game console emulator that allows software designed to be used with the Sony PlayStation to run on personal computers. So I've got 2 test builds for your ears to try out.ĭownload test.7z from - send big files the easy way I slowed it down and I've got 2 guesses:Ģ - $2 VAG shuts down channel volume (aka Pete solution) You do a good job of isolating and stitching the samples together. Especially since I'm not the type to pick up on such sharp details. And make sure to use fresh save states.īug reports are good. ![]() Approaching Eternal-type update periods (note that Eternal uses ADSR float math (?), which is curiously interesting to me).īrain Dead 13 can stay 'broken' (bad sound) for awhile - that's a hard one to figure out. It should come off slightly sharply cleaner if you have high-quality speakers / headphones. Not much more though.Īs a bonus, I've lowered the 1ms -> 0.5ms update times. Still too experimental to add to Linux / Mac. In my case, not doing everything in StartSound but before when VoiceOn activates (ex. Lesson: when lots of events happen in the same 'apu update cycle', order of events is -very- important. Saves are working again and experimental accuracy is improved - no more weird Xeno sounds. Going to take time to look properly at this. Use new save states for this buildThis might fix or break some things so be on alert.ĭown again. = Allows Brain Dead 13 to boot (poor sound) = Lets Square games use sharper volume updates + 0.5 ms SPU updates (45 -> 23 apu cycles) No guarantees it'll be looked at but it's worth a try. If you have genuine bug reports (notably using Gaussian), then please report them here or in the PCSX-r devs thread above. Probably some pitch, fmod, reverb accuracyI'm not officially planning on maintaining this plugin further - I may make some core fixes later. Noise waveforms (don't use white noise) = Looping the FF7 cursor menu works better (more like Eternal now) Voice on/off detection - immediately within same apu cycle ![]()
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