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Okay, well emulation station desktop edition like I just said, but if you want the creme de la creme Look up in the deck. It was originally released for the Steam Deck and Linux But there is a Windows version and it'll install all your emulators for you. It'll set up all the cores It will give you a menu system So you can you know pick your games and stuff like that it also installs emulation station desktop edition by default so check out emu dec e-m-u-e-c-k and that'll make you a lot happier when it comes to ROMs because that one even checks for BIOS files some consoles require BIOS files from the process to ROMs correctly it's like signatures that the ROMs need in certain consoles like Game Boy Advance I think might need one Game Boy might need one Dreamcast might need one but yeah no I've got systems man Jesus I must have 50,000 or more ROMs going all the way back to a Terry to Amiga, Cliquot to all that stuff Commodore 64 to a lesser extent because a lot of those are keyboard games and I prefer to use controller games all the way up to your Nintendo your Super Nintendo GameCube all your Sega's your Genesis your Master System, your Dreamcast, it had your TurboGrafx-16. It's got all of those systems and then it goes all the way into the newer ones with GameCube, Nintendo Wii, Wii U, Nintendo Switch, all of those things and believe it or not bud you get Switch emulator running you get access to tons of newer games that or even still being released in some cases. Wii U, great emulator, CMU. Man, it blow your mind how many good emulators. So yeah, check out EmuDeck. That's my highest recommendation. Desktop edition of emulation is my second, but that comes with EmuDeck. So EmuDeck is the all-encompassing emulation solution. KC2, PKG, Gray, what say you this fine morning?
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