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Watara Supervision emulators

3,609 bytes added, 17:30, 29 May 2023
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Comparisons
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The '''[[wikipedia:Watara Supervision|Watara Supervision]]''', also known as the QuickShot Supervision in the UKand as the Travell-Mate in parts of Asia, is a monochrome handheld game console which was introduced in 1992 as a low-cost competitor for Nintendo's [[Game Boy/Game Boy Color emulators|Game Boy]]. It came packaged with a game called ''Crystball'', which is similar to Atari’s ''Breakout''. One unique feature of the Supervision was that it could its TV-Link peripheral, which allowed the console to be linked up connected to a television via a link cable. Games and its games to be played in this way would display in four colorslimited colour, much like Nintendo's a handful of years before Nintendo’s own Super Game Boy add-on for the [[Super Nintendo emulators|SNES]]. A full color TV link was also in It featured very similar capabilities to the worksGame Boy, but because of the Supervision's failure to make with a major impression among gamers much bigger and slightly higher resolution screen. Sadly, it was cancelledmuch blurrier as well, along with which did not help its sales, already hampered by the lack of recognisable titles and the overall poor quality of most of its games which were in development for it. Only It later received a tiny handful minor hardware revision in the form of games were the Magnum Supervision, for which only one exclusive game was developed by third parties and many were developed in Taiwan or Hong Kong, ''Journey to the West''.
==Emulators==
! scope="col"|Platform(s)
! scope="col"|Version
! scope="col"|<small>[[libretro]https://retroachievements.org/gameList.php?c=63 Retro<br/>Achievements]</small>! scope="col"|[[Emulation accuracy#TV-Link_emulation|AccuracyTV-Link]]! scope="col"|Magnum
! scope="col"|<abbr title="Free/Libre and Open-Source Software">FLOSS</abbr>
! scope="col"|Active
! scope="col"|[[Recommended emulators|Recommended]]
|-
!colspan="89"|PC / x86|-| Potator<br/><small>[https://github.com/libretro/potator potator_libretro]</small>| align=left|{{Icon|Windows|Linux|macOS}}| [https://buildbot.libretro.com/nightly/ libretro core]<br/>[https://archive.org/details/potator-1.0.19 1.0.19] ([https://github.com/infval/potator Potator-SDL2])<br/>[https://www.zophar.net/wsvision/potator.html 0.6] <small>(Legacy)</small>| {{✓}}<ref group=N>Exclusive to libretro core.</ref>| {{✗}}| {{✓}}<ref group=N>Libretro and SDL2 versions only.</ref>| {{✓}}| {{~}}<ref group=N>Libretro core is still partially active.</ref>| {{✓}}
|-
| [[MAME]]
| align=left|{{Icon|Windows|Linux|macOS|BSD}}
| [https://www.mamedev.org/ {{MAMEVer}}]<br/>[https://buildbot.libretro.com/nightly/ libretro core]| {{}}| {{?}}| {{}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✓}}
| {{~}}
|-
| Wataroo
| [http://tailchao.com/Wataroo/ 0.8.0.0]
| {{✗}}
| {{?}}
| {{✗}}
| {{~}}
| {{TBD}}
|-
| Potator
| align=left|{{Icon|Windows}}
| [https://www.zophar.net/wsvision/potator.html 0.6]
| {{✓}}
| ?
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| {{~}}| {{~}}
|-
!colspan="89"|Consoles/ Handhelds
|-
| PotatorPSP
| align=left|{{Icon|PSP}}
| [https://github.com/infval/potator-psp-akop/releases git1.0.6]| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| Mid{{?}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| Potator
| align=left|{{Icon|GCWZero}}
| [https://github.com/alekmaul/potator/tree/master/distrib git1.1]| {{✗}}| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| {{?}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| Potator2x
| align=left|{{Icon|GP2X}}
| [http://wiki.gp2x.org/articles/p/o/t/Potator2x.html r01R1]| {{✗}}| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| {{?}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| {{~}}
|-
| WasabiDS
| align=left|{{Icon|NDS}}
| [https://github.com/FluBBaOfWard/WasabiDS/releases/latest 0.2.2]
| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✓}}
| {{~}}
|-
| PotatorDS
| align=left|{{Icon|NDS}}
| [https://sourceforge.net/projects/potator/files/PotatorDS r1R1]| {{✗}}| {{✗}}| {{✗}}| {{✓}}| {{✗}}| {{✗}}|-| Wasabi| align=left|{{Icon|GBA}}| [https://github.com/FluBBaOfWard/WasabiGBA/releases/latest 0.2.3]| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| {{?✓}}| {{✓}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| {{?}}
|-
!colspan="89"|Calculators
|-
| [https://github.com/gameblabla/potator Potator]
| align=left|{{Icon|Nspire}}
| [https://github.com/gameblabla/potator git][https://www.ticalc.org/archives/files/fileinfo/465/46509.html x.xarchive]| {{✗}}
| {{✗}}
| Mid{{?}}
| {{✓}}
| {{✗}}
| {{~}}
|}
 
<references group=N/>
 
===Comparisons===
;[[MAME]]
:Runs relatively fine, but the sound emulation isn’t quite there yet. This is especially bad with ''Classic Casino''’s sampled speech.
 
;Potator
:The first Supervision emulator, originally developed for Windows using SDL. Surprisingly old, it was last updated in 2005. The sound emulation is only preliminary and there are a lot of bugs and inaccuracies.
 
;:Potator2x
;:Potator’s first fork was a port to the GP2X handheld, abandoned in 2007. This port would serve as base to all subsequent forks, including the libretro version and the Windows SDL2 version.
 
;:Potator (SDL2)
;:Potator’s return to Windows after a chain of handheld ports is one of the very few emulators to support the Magnum and thus ''Journey to the West''. The UI is very barebones, but the emulation is pretty much flawless. Stopped being updated in 2019.
 
;:PotatorDS
;:This emulator is pretty much just a proof-of-concept. It is extremely slow and there is no sound. There is no UI either, and no option to choose a ROM – it always reads from <code>/sv/test.sv</code>.
 
;Wataroo
:A more traditional-looking, fully-featured emulator developed by renowned Atari homebrewer Osman D. after he lost a bet. Like Potator (SDL2), the emulation is pretty spot-on, but despite having really low system requirements, working even under Windows 95, it may chug on less powerful PCs.
 
;Wasabi
:Another slow and silent proof-of-concept, Wasabi was originally released in 2004 as a plugin for the PogoShell flashcart CFW system. The developer picked it back up in late 2022, porting it to the Nintendo DS through devkitPro and then porting it back to the GBA. The latest versions seem to be relatively accurate, with the dev claiming to have full compatibility with the entire commercial library, including the Magnum exclusive. However, the GBA port is still very slow and has no sound, and the DS version seems to have its speed limiter set slightly too fast, with all non-sampled sounds playing in an accordingly higher pitch. The GBA version requires [https://github.com/patters-match/gba-emu-compilation-builders building a compilation] to load ROMs.
 
==TV-Link emulation==
 
Being incredibly rare due to its pitifully low sales, the TV-Link add-on isn’t well understood yet. Currently, no emulator supports it at all, but it is on both Wataroo and Wasabi’s roadmaps.
[[Category:Consoles]]
[[Category:Handheld consoles]]
[[Category:Fourth-generation video game consoles]]
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