Yuzu aims for performance rather than accuracy (games may run a lot faster, but random crashing is frequent).
Written in C++ may contain memory leaks.
To my knowledge, this is the best way I can describe the difference between Yuzu and Ryujinx: It’s “built from the ground up”, mostly in the C language, though apparently the developers have taken a lot of reference from Ryujinx’s source code. And if you can believe it, there’s a Switch emulator for Android called Skyline. It’s clear to me that the Nintendo Switch is a hot topic, and it only makes logical sense to follow up with how Nintendo Switch emulation has progressed since the months have gone by.Īs it stands, the current two emulators that we know of for desktop is Yuzu - developed by the same developers who worked on Citra, the 3DS emulator - and Ryujinx. It’s by far the most popular article I have written on Boiling Steam. It has since garnered over 20k unique readers. A little less than twelve months ago, I had written a guide on how to emulate Nintendo Switch games on Linux.