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PlayStation Portable emulators

No change in size, 03:10, 12 October 2023
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Comparisons: Updated Compatibility list.
===Comparisons===
;[[PPSSPP]] <small class="plainlinks" style="font-weight:normal;">([https://report.ppsspp.org/games compatibility], [https://forums.ppsspp.org/showthread.php?tid=9037 AdHoc compatibility], [https://forums.ppsspp.org/showthread.php?tid=14763 AdHoc compatibility#2])</small>:Released in November of 2012. Compatibility is higher than [[JPCSP]] and games runs significantly faster. The emulator is currently capable of playing the vast majority of the PSP library, with [https://report.ppsspp.org/games 2991 3041 (8384%) out of 3615 '''reported''' titles can be played from start to finish] and the [https://report.ppsspp.org/games?compat=unknown remaining 3407 titles are unreported]. Additionally, both the libretro core and standalone version of PPSSPP (as of [https://www.ppsspp.org/blog/1-16-release-announcement v1.16's release]) support the RetroAchievements service for players hunting video game achievements. The standalone version is highly recommended over the libretro core as the libretro core version can be slow/unstable, especially for mobile users.
;[[JPCSP]]:Requires the Java Runtime Environment to be installed. It is also slower compared to [[PPSSPP]]. JPCSP was built around debugging and was never really meant to be a standard emulator. They made it so they could understand the PSP's inner workings better. Thanks to the JPCSP team, and other PSP homebrew teams, PPSSPP developed at breakneck speeds. Both teams communicate a lot and contribute with each other.
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