Ranking The Best Emulators For Linux To Download In 2024

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If you’re a Linux user looking to emulate all your favourite retro games, then you’ve come to the right place. We have spent a great deal of time researching and testing emulators and have a pretty good idea of where they fall short or excel.

Our experience has led us to lean towards the best all-in-one emulation solutions, and then supplement that setup with individual emulators for the more difficult consoles to recreate.

So let’s give you guys our best list for a good emulation setup to run on Linux to get the most out of your retro games collection!

1. RetroArch

Logo for RetroArch

Okay, if you’ve seen any of our emulation lists in the past, you’ve heard the name RetroArch.

So why does RetroArch keep coming up on our lists?

Well, there are two very important qualities that keep RetroArch at the top of all of our emulation lists. The first is that RetroArch is a cross-platform application with ports for Windows, MacOS, Rasberry Pi, Android, iOS, and Linux (those are just some of the more popular ones).

So the team at RetroArch have been hard at work making the program available on near any device you might wish you put it on. It comes preloaded on pretty much every retro emulation handheld, and has become the number one go-to program to launch your retro game ROMs.

The second is that RetroArch comes packed full of many of the best game console cores, all in one convenient place. A “core” is an arm of code within the program that adds support for an individual retro game console.

Most code developed for retro console emulation is created as open-source, which means it is free to be used by other developers to further develop or include in their own programs. RetroArch is a single application that will give you support for almost all of the retro game consoles that you may wish you play. And you will not have to go searching for the individual programs for those consoles.

As an example, PPSSPP is one of the most popular programs out there for PSP emulation. And it is a program we were planning on including on this list. But then we realized…You wouldn’t need to go out of your way to find that program, as it is included right within RetroArch (the actual PPSSPP code!).

The all-in-one quality of RetroArch is what makes it our absolute perfect emulation solution, with all of your favorite game consoles, in one easy-to-use program. And for that reason, we are giving RetroArch our number-one spot!

2. Dolphin

Dolphin Emulator logo

If there’s something we love more than Playstation, it’s Nintendo. We’ve said it before (but it’s true!), the GameCube and the Wii are home to some of the absolute best video game titles ever created.

Much like the PS2 and PS3 consoles, the GameCube and Wii were notoriously difficult to emulate! It took years to get emulation for them working, but now we are living in the golden era of emulation, people!

Dolphin Emulator is a free, open-source emulator for the GameCube and Wii consoles, that supports 36% “perfect” play, and 60% “playable”. And that includes your Super Marios and your Donkey Kongs and your Legend of Zeldas all at “perfect” game play.

Plus, as any good emulator should, Dolphin offers modern upgrades to classic games, giving full HD graphics to your game titles. So they will look even better than the original. We are gigantic Nintendo fans here at RetroDodo, so it was a very easy decision to cover the Dolphin emulator for our list of best emulators on Linux.

3. RPCS3

Logo for the RPCS3

If there were a console that had a better game library than the PS2, it’s the Playstation 3! (For those keeping up… 3 is more than 2!). While the sheer number of titles is only a fraction of those on the PS2, the third iteration of the Playstation console delivered some of my absolute favorite games of all time.

I mean, just take a look at our list of the PS3’s biggest sellers. Grand Theft Auto 5? The Last of Us? Uncharted 3? They’re all on my list of all-time favorite titles!

As part of the seventh generation of video game consoles (along with Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Nintendo’s Wii), the PS3 is still among some of the more difficult consoles to emulate.

But lucky for gamers on Windows, MacOS and Linux, we have the amazing team behind RPCS3, who through years of reverse engineering have produced a a working open-source Sony PlayStation 3 emulator that supports nearly 68% of the game titles available.

It is awesome to see that there is such a strong community still working to bring this classic library to our personal computers.

We look forward to seeing improvements in the future in PS3 emulation, and we are happy to see RPCS3 making an appearance on this list of the best emulators for Linux.

4. PCSX2

PCSX2 logo

The PlayStation 2 is still the best-selling game console of all time, at over 155 million units. And with an absolutely gigantic library of over 10k game titles, it’s easy to see why the PS2 would still be one of the most sought-after consoles to emulate.

PCSX2 has a strong reputation in the community as the absolute best emulator for the PlayStation 2 console. With reliable gameplay of over 98% of the game library, and also features some pretty awesome upscaling features to make your retro games look better than they did on original hardware!

The Team behind PCSX2 has been hard at work for nearly 20 years on the program, and are constantly updating and improving the platform. The PS2 is still one of our absolute favorite game consoles ever created, and revisiting some of those classic games on our personal computer is a joy. So for that reason, it was very easy to include PCSX2 on our list of the best emulators for linux in 2023.


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