Xbox emulators
Developer | Microsoft |
---|---|
Type | Home video game console |
Generation | Sixth generation |
Release date | 2001 |
Discontinued | 2009 |
NGSR | 1025 |
Introductory price | US$299.99 (equivalent to $516.15 in 2024) |
Successor | Xbox 360 |
Emulated | ✓ |
- For emulators that run on the original Xbox, see Emulators on Xbox.
The Xbox is a sixth-generation console released by Microsoft on November 15, 2001. Known as the DirectXbox during development, it is notable for the specs having similarities to a PC due to using familiar components around the x86 architecture. It had a custom Pentium III CPU at 733 MHz with 64 MBs of RAM, and a custom Nvidia GPU codenamed NV2A at 233 MHz. The Xbox was often said to be the most powerful console from the sixth generation, and Sega later designed the Chihiro arcade system with the same components.
The Xbox was a modest seller and helped create a brand for Microsoft that would give its successor a stronger market share in the west. Despite Microsoft's best efforts, the original Xbox and succeeding consoles from the company never gained a foothold in Japan for various reasons.[1] It had a number of advantages over other sixth-gen consoles at the time; it was the only console to include a hard disk,[N2 1] meaning it was the first to be able to rip CDs, and it was the first and only console of the lineup to include a unified online service called Xbox Live,[N2 2] prompting Sony to create the PlayStation Network the next generation.
Early in its lifespan, the Xbox had an unusually active modding scene compared to the other consoles (often vindicated by the incredibly short warranty). Upon the first jailbreak by Andrew Huang, the scene ultimately delivered no comprehensive emulation until the mid-2010s[N2 3], as Xbox homebrew typically relied on stolen XDKs rather than true reverse engineering work. Although developers have continued to have issues because, alongside the poorly documented hardware and repeated uses of the simpler but largely failed HLE approach, there has been little motivation to develop an emulator because many of the Xbox's games either came from Windows or were then released for Windows afterward (though it does retain a few exclusives). However, the Xbox emulation scene has been resurging with two emulators at the forefront since mid-2017. Their developers continue to say there's no competition between them, as they're both open-source and have different goals and methods.[2][3]
Contents
Emulators
- Note: xboxdevwiki's own list of emulators contains over 20 different emulator projects, most of which were abandoned not long after they started. Only 2 emulators have been making progress.
Name | Platform(s) | Latest version | Chihiro (千尋) | Hardware features and peripherals |
Enhancements | Compatibility | License | Active | Recommended |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PC / x86 | |||||||||
xemu | 0.7.134 | ~ (WIP) | ~ | ~ | 85% 867 out of 1025 tested titles[N 1] |
GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✓ | ✓ | |
Cxbx-Reloaded | git | ~ (WIP) | ~ | ~ | 16% 166 out of 1032 tested titles |
GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✓ | ~ | |
MAME | 0.272 | ~ (WIP) | ✗ | ✗ | N/A | GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✓ | ✗ | |
XQEMU | git | ~* | ✗ | ✗ | 4% 35 out of 828 tested titles |
GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✗ | ✗ | |
StrikeBox | git | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | N/A | BSD-2-Clause (Permissive) | ✗ | ✗ | |
Cxbx | git | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | 8% 5 out of 61 tested titles |
GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✗ | ✗ | |
Dxbx | 0.5 | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ?% 1 playable title |
GPLv2 (Copyleft) | ✗ | ✗ | |
Xenoborg | r19 | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | N/A | Proprietary | ✗ | ✗ | |
Xeon | 1.0 | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | N/A | Proprietary | ✗ | ✗ | |
Consoles | |||||||||
Fusion | 1.7 | ✗ | ~ | ? | 46% 463 out of 996 tested titles 65% 644 out of 987 tested titles |
Proprietary | ✗ | ✓ | |
Fission | Patch based | ✗ | ~ | ~ | 6% 63 out of 996 tested titles |
Proprietary | ✗ | ~ |
- ↑ Playable state in the xemu compatibility list purposely doesn't include performance metrics due to varying PC build possibilities (see #Comparisons section) and minor graphical, audio, or FMV issues[1]. While the compatibility list categorizes majority games as playable, some users may encounter issues that impact their individual experience and consider them unplayable.
Comparisons
- XQEMU
- A low-level emulator based on QEMU. It can emulate the BIOS and many games at very slow speeds but is sometimes faster than Cxbx with acceptable graphics. Audio has not been tested but is assumed to be emulated, just not forwarded to the audio hardware for some reason.
- xemu
- A low-level emulator by Matt Borgerson continuing much of the work done on XQEMU. Focuses on stability, performance, and ease of use. xemu also supports various enhancements and some system features and peripherals. While some titles require powerful hardware for full-speed emulation (see the Computer specifications#xemu page), CPU performance, particularly single-threaded performance, is often the bottleneck. Additionally, using demanding graphical enhancements may also require a strong GPU. There are currently no plans for a mobile port of xemu on iOS or Android, the emulator hasn't reached the performance necessary to run well on iOS or Android at this time.[2] Currently, work is underway to implement a Vulkan renderer in xemu, but it is still under development.
- Cxbx
- One of the first Xbox emulators. It started as an ahead-of-time compiler for Xbox executables.
- Dxbx
- A port of Cxbx to Delphi, expanded with a redesigned symbol detection engine, many rendering improvements, a new pixel shader converter, etc. It ended its development at a similar stage as Cxbx.
- Cxbx-Reloaded
- A fork of Cxbx that has been having good development momentum since mid-2016. It is built for x86_64 machines and includes a ton of improvements to its HLE kernel, some from code originating in Dxbx and other related forks. While it has HLE support for the GPU and other parts (e.g., audio) to make many games run fast, XQEMU's LLE implementation was introduced in April 2018 and is expected to help even further. Beyond this, Cxbx-Reloaded supports various enhancements and some system features and peripherals. Roadmap for more information about CXBX-Reloaded emulator.
- StrikeBox
- Beginning low-level emulator that just initializes an x86 system and runs whatever is in the ROM. Few works for this. It was uploaded to GitHub on Dec 5, 2017, by mborgerson, a well-known XQEMU contributor.
- Xeon
- Can emulate Halo: Combat Evolved to the point where the first stage is semi-playable. The walls and ground are pitch black, and the game crashes after you complete the first stage or right after you select the difficulty on modern versions of Windows. It was noteworthy for being the first emulator to run Halo as well as for predating the PC port of Halo.
- MAME
- Existing x86 emulation in MAME has given way to an Xbox driver. However, it has been marked as not working and sound as unimplemented (graphics are OK, though).
Consoles
- Fusion
- The internal name for backward compatibility on the Xbox 360. It supports a specific list of games that, while some work right off the bat, may need additional patches to play properly. It also requires your console to have system storage. Some games still have issues with graphical glitches and slowdowns to errors that can make standard gameplay basically impossible. If you remove the game whitelist; it allows for more Xbox Classic games to be played on the Xbox 360 than are officially supported. Some games not officially supported play almost perfectly, however, some have various issues. [4]
- Fission
- The internal name for backward compatibility on the Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S. Supporting much fewer games likely due to licensing: developers and publishers going defunct, movie and toy tie-in, brands, vehicles, music Licenses expiring. However, it has better loading times and allows the ones that do work to run at twice the Xbox's standard resolution (480p) on both Xbox One (S) and Xbox Series S consoles (up to 960p), and more than quadruple on Xbox One X and Xbox Series X consoles (up to 2160p).
- Unfortunately, with November 2021 update Microsoft ends the program and said: "This latest and final addition of titles to the backwards compatibility program was only possible through the passion and feedback from the community," Microsoft said. "Your constant requests for specific titles and enhancements encouraged the Backwards Compatibility team to partner with the original creators to preserve thousands of games from over four generations of Xbox. While we continue to stay focused on preserving and enhancing the art form of games, we've reached the limit of our ability to bring new games to the catalog from the past due to licensing, legal and technical constraints. Thank you for being part of this journey with us."[5]
Hardware features and peripherals
Name | xemu[N3 1] | Cxbx-Reloaded | Fusion | Fission |
---|---|---|---|---|
MS Dash | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
Xbox Live | ✓ | ?* | ✗[N3 2] | ✗[N3 2] |
Xbox Live Arcade | ✓ | ✓* | ✗ | ✗ |
System Link | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Pressure Sensitive Buttons | ~[N3 3] | ~[N3 3] | ✗ | ✗ |
DVD Drive | ✗ | ✗* | ✓ | ~ |
DTS Surround (DVD-Video only) Dolby Surround Dolby Digital Live 5.1 |
✓ | ? | ✓* | ? |
Development Kits | ~ | ~ | TBD | TBD |
Peripherals | ||||
Xbox Memory Unit | ✓* | ✓[3] | TBD | TBD |
Xbox Live Communicator | ~* | ✗ | ~[N3 4] | TBD |
Windows Media Center Extender | ✗ | ✗ | ? | ✗ |
Xbox Karaoke | ✗ | ✗ | TBD | TBD |
Xbox Cam | ✗* | ✗ | TBD | TBD |
Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit | ~ | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
Steering wheels | ✗* | ✗ | TBD | TBD |
Light guns | ✗* | ✓[4] | TBD | TBD |
Steel Battalion Controller | WIP | ✓[5] | TBD | TBD |
Gametrak | ✗* | ✗ | TBD | TBD |
Dance Dance Revolution Game Pad | ✗* | ✗ | TBD | TBD |
USB Keyboard | ? | ? | ? | ? |
- ↑ Feature Request: Adding missing peripherals for xemu
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Insignia FAQ: Insignia is unable to support Xbox 360/One/Series consoles in any capacity; we may look into supporting Xbox 360's backwards compatibility feature in the future, but that is not planned at this time.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Xbox controller is supported by USB passthrough technology for xemu and Cxbx-Reloaded. Other controllers with pressure-sensitive buttons like DualShock 2, DualShock 3 or Steam Deck touchpads aren't supported, but developers plan to implement their support via SDL library.
- ↑ With Xbox 360, only the headset without the communicator piece works.
MS Dash
DVD Drive
- consolemods: Xbox DVD Drive and DVD-ROM
- xboxdevwiki: Xbox DVD Drive
- xboxdevwiki: XGD/Xbox Game Disc
- xboxdevwiki XDVDFS (XISO) images
OG Xbox DVD drive supports Audio CD and XGD discs. Optical disc drives for PCs usually aren't capable to read OG Xbox format DVD-ROM/XGD, you would need very specific drive and firmware for that. More info in ripping games section and reverse engineering section.
- Neither xemu nor CXBX-Reloaded support OG Xbox DVD-ROM/XGD physical discs even if you got compatible drive and firmware. You need to rip your disc and create .xiso disc image. See xemu: disc images and XISO for CXBX-Reloaded pages for further information. For xemu, there is a feature request for adding support for loading Audio CD discs and images, also there is another pull request for loading retail Xbox titles both in 'redump' format and xiso format with an unmodified retail BIOS.
- There was a pull request for adding Xbox-DVD Drive emulation to xqemu, but it seems discontinued.
- Xbox 360 console (Fusion) supports OG Xbox DVD-ROM/XGD discs.
- Xbox One and Xbox Series consoles (Fission) don't really support OG Xbox DVD-ROM/XGD discs because it only recognizes the disc, after that it is downloading/installing the game from Xbox Live not from the DVD-ROM.
- See #Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit section for DVD-Video compatibility or this dedicated page for more information about home media playback with emulation software.
- See Ripping games.
System Link
Offline multiplayer gaming on the Xbox home console over a LAN (local area network) multiplayer games, just like LAN tunneling for PlayStation systems. Over time, most private servers have been shut. However, computer programs such as XBSlink, SVDL and XLink Kai allow users to play multiplayer for LAN supported games by using a network configuration that simulates a worldwide LAN.
- xemu and CXBX-Reloaded supports System Link, see Xemu - XLink Kai Setup.
- Fusion supports System Link, see Xbox 360 - XLink Kai Setup
- Fission supports System Link, see Xbox One - XLink Kai Setup
Peripherals
Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit
If you do not mod your console and use XBMC4Xbox you need this dongle which contains a ROM with an XBE which provides some functions for the DVD-Video playback.
- xemu has no Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit emulation at the moment, so there is no DVD-Video support. But if you have this peripheral physically, it is possible to play DVD-Video discs using xemu and manually attaching the DVD kit via USB.[6] See this feature request page for more information.
- Xbox 360/Fusion has no Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit support; however, no emulation process needed to handle DVD-Video for Xbox 360 anyway. DVD-Video is already supported out-of-the-box.
- Xbox One and Xbox Series consoles (Fission) can play DVD-Video. To watch DVD-Video on those consoles, you first need to install the Blu-ray Player software app which is not only play DVD-Video but also play Blu-ray Video discs.
- MVG: Secrets of the Original Xbox DVD Playback Kit
- See #DVD Drive section for Audio CD compatibility or this dedicated page for more information about home media playback with emulation software.
Windows Media Center Extender
Thanks to this peripheral/add-on which is comes with DVD and remote controller: it's possible to media streaming (music, photos and videos) with PC using Windows XP MCE. This peripheral/add-on shouldn't be confused with other standalone Windows Media Center Extender devices or Xbox 360's built-in version 2 Media Center Extender functionality and app.
USB Keyboard
Support is dependent on the game, but apparently Phantasy Star Online does handle generic keyboards for in-game text messaging. XBMC4XBOX builds contains built-in support for some basic USB keyboards and mice that supports the HID (Human Interface Device class) USB standard, this requires you have an Xbox Gameport → USB adapter. These are available from various suppliers on the web, and there are also tutorials available at the Xbox-Scene.com describing how to make your own convertor. Team-XBMC recommends "media center" keyboards (with built-in mouse) for XBMC use, for that true media-center feel.
- xemu placeholder text
- Fusion placeholder text
- Fission placeholder text
- See List of games with keyboard and mouse support page for more information.
Enhancements
Name | xemu | Cxbx-Reloaded | Fusion | Fission | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Graphics | Resizable Internal Resolution | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ✓ | ||||||
Widescreen hack | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ? | |||||||
Texture Replacement | ✗* | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Ray-tracing (DXR, VRT and MRT) |
Implementing ray-tracing in an emulator is unfortunately quite challenging and unlikely to be possible soon. However, you can try "Screen-Space Ray Traced Global Illumination" shader using ReShade. Demonstration | ||||||||||
Pre-rendering AA (MSAA, SSAA) |
✗ | ✗ | ? | ? | |||||||
Super-resolution techniques (DLSS, XeSS and FSR 2+) |
Requires access to the depth buffer and temporal data like motion-vectors, so it is quite challenging and unlikely to be possible soon. Besides any GPU that can use DLSS can run these emulators at higher resolution than native anyway. | ||||||||||
RTX Remix | Implementing RTX Remix technology in an emulator is unfortunately quite challenging and unlikely to be possible soon. You can use ReShade for post-processing. | ||||||||||
Performance | Internal Framerate Hack | ✓ | ✓ | ? | ✓ | ||||||
Frame generation technologies (LSFG, DLSS-G, ExtraSS and AFMF) |
Implementing frame generation technology in an emulator is unfortunately quite challenging and unlikely to be possible soon however post-processing techniques such as motion interpolation is quite possible. Input latency will be a crucial factor, but its impact likely varies depending on the specific technique used, it is recommended to use after applying the "Internal Framerate Hack". While AFMF or LSFG can be used with xemu or CXBX-Reloaded, please be aware that some visual glitches and artifacts may occur at this time. | ||||||||||
Overclock | ~* | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Preload optical disc image to RAM For users with sluggish multi-platter HDDs or plagued by horrible seek times, this enhancement might offer smoother experience, potentially reduced power consumption; it also shines when disc images reside on a network drive. Although keep in mind that preloading image would take some time, and it will require additional amount of RAM capacity. |
✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗[N4 1] | |||||||
Rendering latency reduction technologies (LatencyFleX, Reflex and Anti-Lag+) |
While most emulators offer frame pacing or framebuffer latency control options, implementing rendering latency reduction technologies isn't currently feasible. This is likely doesn't offer enough benefits to justify the development effort. | ||||||||||
Post-Processing | Post-rendering AA (FXAA, TXAA and MLAA/SMAA) |
✗ | ? | ? | ? | ||||||
Post-rendering scaling (Sharp bilinear, Lanczos and FSR 1) |
✗ | ? | ? | ? | |||||||
Filters | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
AI-powered filter compatible (Freestyle) |
? | ? | ? | ✗ | |||||||
Shader Chain | ✗* | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Inverse tone mapping compatible | ? | ? | ✗ | ✓* | |||||||
TAS features | Macros/Scripts/Lua | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ||||||
Rewind | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Fast-Forward/Turbo Speed | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Savestates/Snapshots | ✓* | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Movie recording/playback | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Controls | Mouse Injector Compatible | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ||||||
Input lag-mitigating technique | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Quality of life | Pause/Resume Emulation | ✓ | ? | ? | ? | ||||||
Built-in mod editor and manager | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Built-in Cheat Manager | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Built-in Patch Manager | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Built-in Custom resolution/CRTSwitchRes For using this on Windows OS you need CRT Emudriver. Another option is using EDID editor tool such as "Custom Resolution Utility". |
✗ | ✗ | ~* | ✗ | |||||||
Streamable compression format | ✗* | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | |||||||
Per-Game Profiles | ? | ? | ? | ? | |||||||
Command Line Options | ✓ | ? | ? | ? | |||||||
Variable Refresh Rate compatible | ✓ | ? | ✗ | ? | |||||||
Big Picture Mode | ~* | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | |||||||
Misc | RetroAchievements | ✗* | ✗ | ✗[N4 2] | ✗[N4 2] | ||||||
EmuVR support | Exclusive to libretro cores. So there is no support at the moment. | ||||||||||
AI Service With the help of OCR and other techniques, the AI service can provide a live translation of a game, or text-to-speech capabilities for the visually impaired among other things, either on demand or automatically. |
Exclusive to libretro cores at the moment. So there is no support. | ||||||||||
Free Look Free Look is an enhancement feature that allows manipulation of the in-game camera. |
While freecam would be technically possible, it will require per-game patches. Said patches would require a significant amount of time to reverse the game's engine, which means that only someone talented with enough dedication to a single game could do it. | ||||||||||
Debug features | ✓* | ✓* | ✗ | ✗ |
- ↑ Fission has no Preload image to RAM enhancement, but it has better loading times than the original hardware as mentioned in #Comparisons section.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Unfortunately, not a single one of the original Xbox games added to the backward compatibility program support achievements.
Chihiro
The Chihiro arcade system was produced by Sega in 2003. It consists of an Xbox motherboard (with double the RAM as with devkits) with additional boards for handling arcade I/O (Sega JVS standard).
Cxbx-Reloaded[6] and especially xemu (the original Xbox emulators) can also run a handful of Chihiro arcade games.[7]
As the inner workings of the Xbox are better understood, Chihiro emulation support and accuracy will improve. Feature Request: improving Chihiro emulation for xemu.
Emulation issues
The Xbox is infamous in the emulation scene for being the worst case of false advertising. For the projects currently available and active, there is a high barrier to entry for the effort involved, and it is the same reason why consoles using off-the-shelf hardware (or reused hardware) are easier to emulate. To users, being "basically a PC" and "x86-based" is a selling point despite that not being the case, as the Xbox has a number of proprietary elements that are nothing like standard PC hardware (like the eighth-gen "x86-based" consoles). Many aspects of the Xbox's architecture aren't openly documented, making it a major pain to figure out.[8][9][10][11][12] For example, the APU; one of two sound processors on the MCPX southbridge chip of the Xbox chipset, is incredibly powerful and uses complex processing steps that are difficult to figure out using clean-room reverse engineering.
Despite developments has unfortunately lost momentum in recent years, the good news is the efforts currently underway are starting to see real effects thanks to Cxbx-Reloaded and xemu teams.
For more information about the Xbox system and reverse engineering;
- XboxDevWiki; for Xbox hardware documentation.
- Rodrigo Copetti: Xbox Architecture - A practical analysis
- hawk - Open Source Recreation of the Xbox Live Communicator for Original Xbox
- Microsoft Xbox Live docs
- Code Not Magic: Archive Formats on the Xbox: Why and How with BLiNX 2
- lib86cpu project
- MVG:Original Xbox Emulation on the PC (Jul 29, 2019), Original Xbox Emulation on the PC (Oct 4, 2021), Xbox System-Link works across four console generations, Revisiting Original Xbox Backward Compatibility (Fusion) on the Xbox 360, Secrets of The Scene: How Cracking Groups Ripped Original Xbox Discs, The Original Xbox is the Sega Dreamcast 2?
- CXBX-Reloaded Discord server, xemu Discord Server (For general and development discussions on OG Xbox emulation, especially for xemu, Cxbx-Reloaded and any legacy emulators.)
- Personal Remarks about the Xbox Emulator (Fusion) by Michael Brundage
- Digital Foundry: Xbox Series X: Auto HDR Mode Tested - What Works and What Doesn't
Notes
- ↑ The PlayStation 2 also had a hard disk accessory, but the Xbox had it built-in on all models. Consoles in the seventh generation and onward began to include internal storage in varying forms.
- ↑ The Dreamcast had Sega Net in North America and Dreamarena in Europe, but Xbox Live was the same for all regions.
- ↑ The Xbox would have been too difficult to emulate at the time anyway, as its specs often rivaled that of consumer PCs. It was alleged that many developers received legal threats from Microsoft to dissuade them from trying.
See also
References
- ↑ Why The Xbox Failed In Japan. YouTube (2018-07-16)
- ↑ JayFoxRox's statement (representing XQEMU). Reddit (2018-07-14).
- ↑ SoullessSentinel's statement (representing Cxbx-Reloaded). Reddit (2017-07-13).
- ↑ FrameRater's 360's Xbox Emulator EXPANDED!, Unlocking MORE Xbox Originals on 360 videos about this hack.
- ↑ https://www.gamespot.com/articles/xbox-backwards-compatibility-adds-70-more-games-today-as-microsoft-ends-the-program/1100-6498021/
- ↑ MrThunderwing's video: Outrun 2 - Chihiro Beta
- ↑ Emu Gamer: Chihiro emulation YouTube videos
- ↑ Why is XBOX emulation premature?. ngemu (2010-02-15)
- ↑ /LTCG (Link-time Code Generation). Microsoft
- ↑ Under The Hood: Link-time Code Generation. Microsoft
- ↑ Xbox Emulation: The History & Roadblocks. Youtube (2018-03-08)
- ↑ Why is there a lack of Original Xbox emulation?. Reddit (2017-05-29)
Consoles: Xbox • Xbox 360 • Xbox One (X|S)‡ • Xbox Series (X|S)‡ Operating systems: MS-DOS • Windows 9x (95/98/ME) • Windows 2000/XP/Vista • Windows 7/8/8.1/10/11 Home computers: MSX |