- Joined
- Sep 7, 2016
With older systems, you could just download every single game ever made for them and it wouldn't take up that much space, so you could just copy them all onto your emulation machine and go to town. But once discs started rolling in, that stopped being much of an option. I think PS1 alone is just short of a full terabyte, which even today is a healthy chunk of even a big hard drive. Compare that with its contemporary, the N64, which is around 5GB. Warehousing 10 years worth of Madden and FIFA games isn't so bad when we're talking a hundred megabytes, but you start to feel like an idiot when those games you'll never even consider touching are taking up several gigabytes, and you can't delete them because you won't have a complete collection, and that kind of travesty would cause any one of us to start autistically screeching.
It grow in size if you want to be super-complete as well.
This is a complete SNES set for spergs, good if you want to play the Quebec release of A Link to the Past in french or the official Swedish translation of Shadowrun(they translated a couple of games and for those laughing at mistakes in the FF6 translation, oh boy. "open chest" became "open breast" where the singular 'breast' reads as the plural titties, language is funny).
There's a lot of overlap of course and uncompressed it gets big.
Emulation is great for older home computers and with WinUAE games like Elite 2 can run at more than 2 fps by emulating the A4000. The one at the bottom is the Vampire accelerator for the physical Amiga, but it gives you an idea of how it runs.