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Emulation accuracy

1 byte added, 30 January
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Perfection?
==Perfection?==
While it may be theoretically possible to have a 100% perfect emulator, that feat is very rare (if not nearly impossible), even for some highly regarded emulators such as [[higan]] or kevtris's work on the various FPGA-based consoles by Analogue. Just because an emulator claims to be "cycle accurate" or "100% compatible" does not mean that said emulator is flawless. This even includes situations in which all emulator accuracy tests (iei.e. [[PS1 Tests]]) are passed, as these tests cannot cover every single edge case, and some of these tests may even fail on real hardware, leading to even more confusion. Some things are nearly impossible to perfectly emulate, such as some of the illegal opcodes of the [[wikipedia:MOS_Technology_6502|6502]], where the results are completely unpredictable on hardware, and different hardware revisions have different results and different illegal opcodes. The closest one could get to writing a perfect emulator would be if someone were to exactly copy an original ASIC map or a decap onto an FPGA, and even then, that isn't always a magic bullet.
While any given emulator may not be perfect, that does not mean that the emulator is bad by any means. Writing an accurate emulator is extremely hard work, and while perfection may be nearly impossible at the moment, that doesn't mean that games can't be enjoyed. Work on archival via emulation has come a very long way since the emulators of the 1990s, and things are only getting better from here, with excellent emulators such as the previously mentioned [[higan]] and kevtris's [[FPGA]] cores being available to use right now. In other words, "good enough" goes a long way.
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