Crime Why I said no to Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom at 60fps on an emulator


19 May 2023

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Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom - not the way Nintendo wants you to play (pic: YouTube)

A reader obsessed with frame rates and resolution contemplates pirating Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom, to play as an emulated version on PC.

Before the release of Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom I had anticipated the hours I was going to lose to the game itself. I had not anticipated the hours I would lose to working out a moral conundrum that my experience with the game left me battling with. To emulate or not to emulate? I’m sure that this argument will only resonate with the quiet minority of performance snobs out there such as myself.

The silent sufferers, working with overpriced rigs, running benchmarks, and cursing whatever deity they hold dear for every lost frame. I understand that I am likely the exception and not the rule when it comes to my core values as a gamer, and my unerring pursuit of a minimum 60fps at all costs will certainly draw some ire from the purists among you and I am willing to accept that.

The first few hours with Tears Of The Kingdom were not marred by performance issues, but the first major frame drop that I experienced planted a seed in my mind that would grow into a fully-fledged problem. It was jarring but, like many a plummeting Korok, I shook it off and went right back to that same spot and awaited someone to move me once again.

A few more dips and I thought maybe playing handheld would help the situation, I undocked the Switch and ventured forth. A few more drops here and there, each one more disruptive than the last; they became akin to nails on a chalkboard or the grinding of teeth. A shooting metallic volt in my mind with ever increasing severity, I was becoming concerned that it was going to launch me into a fugue state.

I thought perhaps it was just my machine, which has recently started making a churning sound when booting up most software. A quick Google search and there were a lot of reports of solid performance, it must be noted, and a fair amount with stuttering performance similar to my experience, especially when using Ultrahand.

I placed the Switch aside for a time and started watching some YouTube videos on the game, when I came across emulator gameplay running at 1440p 60fps near flawlessly. I knew of the existence of Switch emulators for some time but I had never any real reason to look into the possibility of using one. I started researching, my main concern was obtaining the software to run on an emulator. Having an emulator is a bit like owning a gun (in places where that’s allowed), illegality only comes into question once you shoot someone with it.

By downloading a pirated copy of Tears Of The Kingdom, was I metaphorically putting one right between the eyes of our beloved Zelda? I had bought a copy on day one, I had the Switch and I’ve got my subscription to Nintendo Switch Online. They’ve got all the money they’re going to get out of me for the month at least.

The devil on my shoulder had the more reasonable arguments, the angel on the other was frantic and hyperbolic. Ultimately, I decided not to do it, though I wanted to. Maybe it was the ‘you wouldn’t steal a car ad’ echoing through my psyche from when I was a child… not that it stopped me in my teens.

Through all the deliberating and research, I ended up not really playing all that much for a few days. It is Nintendo’s software and they are well within their right to select the delivery system of that software. It is just a true shame that the best way to experience the game can only be achieved through piracy.

Does Nintendo have a responsibility to ensure that they offer the premium way to experience their own content?

We all know a Switch 2 is coming, which I’m sure will yield some much needed improvement in the realm of performance. It will, however, still be a handheld device and there are always going to be limitations.

When your technology struggles to keep up with your flagship titles, you have to question: could you be doing something differently?

By reader Michael Byron

The reader’s feature does not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro.

You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at gamecentral@metro.co.uk or use our Submit Stuff page and you won't need to send an email.





‘The Legend Of Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom’ Emulator Use Surges As Fans Dodge Switch Hardware Limits​

Paul Tassi
May 15, 2023

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Tears of the Kingdom

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is sailing toward what appears to be an inevitable Game of the Year win. But for some players, six year old Switch hardware with low resolution and often sub 30 fps is too much to take after years playing on PS5, Xbox Series X or PC. And as such, emulator use for Tears of the Kingdom is on the rise.

This is not encouragement, nor instruction on how to emulate Tears of the Kingdom, but just a statement of fact, as my Twitter feed and YouTube recommendations are full of emulated gameplay extolling just how much better the game looks and runs while using emulators.

Switch emulators are as old as the Switch itself, but as one the ultimate “must-play” games of this generation (well, the Switch is so old it’s essentially spanned two generations now) the concept is now front and center.

Emulators are running Tears of the Kingdom up to 4K, 60 fps on PC, and really well on Steam Deck, as well, if the player wants to retain that portability. You can see what that looks like in footage below. It’s not going to like, completely overhaul the graphics and engine of the game, but the difference is certainly stark:


The Nintendo Switch is six years old and when it debuted it was already less powerful than PS4 and Xbox One. Now, it’s a solid generation and a half behind PS5 and Xbox Series X, and miles behind PC, and many gamers don’t have the patience for it.

Or of course, they want it for free.

I do know some players that have shelled out $70 for the Switch version of the game, then put it on a shelf and downloaded an emulator to actually play it. Nintendo gets their well-deserved money, the player gets a much smoother, better-looking version of the game. I guess it’s a bit like shoplifting from a store then buying the same item online from the same store later? That’s uhh…somewhat murky I guess. And I doubt that the vast majority of people emulating the game are giving Nintendo $70, which in that case it’s…very much just stealing.

Everyone expects Nintendo to release fully new hardware, some sort of “Switch 2” in the next year or two, where no doubt an upgraded version of Tears of the Kingdom taking advantage of the new tech would be sold. But for now, Switch tech is so old that it is driving some to seek alternatives, however I very much doubt that Tears of the Kingdom will have trouble selling an incredible amount of copies regardless.
 
This is like refusing to play Drakengard 3 on anything but original hardware. You can dump the ROM. If I wanted to, I could dump the ISO of Drakengard 3 from my legit copy of the game. Boom. Legal.
Yeah they act like that emulation in itself is illegial. It isn't. They settled that around 2001. Crack your switch, dump the ROM as is Halal, and boom, Nintendo can't do shit to you.
 
"I could give money to the company to purchase their game, and then also play an emulated version, but daddy didn't gib me permission to play at 60fps so I won't."
Daddy government gave permission unless you live in Japan or some other place with insane laws lobbied for by a hanafuda company. Just get stuff to dump the ROM. Discs are easier to dump, but cartridges aren't impossible. They just need more specialized stuff.
 
This guy is a soy faggot who is in need of a swirly, but there is an argument that Nintendo, to keep producing good things, needs to maintain itself as an entity by either law or money. And if you're only maintained by money, you're master is moloch, which corrupts your soul and whatever it tries to create.

It seems a bit counter intuitive, but when you see the alternative to Nintendo authoritarianism is readily pirate-able micromutt shit and blue hair indie turds, you come to understand it is not rules that are bad, but certain types of people that should never be let make rules.

Though to stop being terminally political for a second, Nintendo is forced to play by an international legal system which worships money so it's easy to see them as just another money grubbing corporation. They certainly are that, as they are required to be, but Nintendo, more than the others, has an ethnos about them which they maintain in parallel to the realities of their budget.

Though I admit, I feel a little dirty defending nintendo just because I wanted to politisperg.
 
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Though to stop being terminally political for a second, Nintendo is forced to play by an international legal system which worships money so it's easy to see them as just another money grubbing corporation.
Nintendo doesn't want to be evil, guys! They're forced to be evil by the evil international market, even though they're far more litigious and petty than any of their direct competitors!
 
good to see im not alone. i have never gotten the love for zelda and i have always been a lone outsider on this. i remember trying very hard to like the n64 version but was very bored by it.
I find the 3D Zeldas extremely clunky and slow. It was understandable during the N64 generation as most 3D games were pretty clunky and slow, but by the time Wind Waker came out and compared to its very mechanically-slick, streamlined peers in 2003, it was completely unacceptable.
 
Through all the deliberating and research, I ended up not really playing all that much for a few days. It is Nintendo’s software and they are well within their right to select the delivery system of that software. It is just a true shame that the best way to experience the game can only be achieved through piracy.
Just buy the game, dump the rom and play it on your computer. I know it's pride month but stop being such a colossal faggot. How did your bullshit moral quandary warrant an entire article.
 
This is like refusing to play Drakengard 3 on anything but original hardware. You can dump the ROM. If I wanted to, I could dump the ISO of Drakengard 3 from my legit copy of the game. Boom. Legal.
Crack your switch, dump the ROM as is Halal, and boom, Nintendo can't do shit to you
Just buy the game, dump the rom and play it on your computer.
You think this soy would hack his precious Switch? He probably bought the OLED Zelda one (probably his 3rd Switch), and hacking patched units requires a mod chip soldered to the PCB. Nintendo also DMCA'd LockpickRCM, which is required for dumping the system keys required to dump an XCI (cartridge image). Not like the DMCA actually did anything because its open source, but this is expecting WAY too much from an individual such as this.
 
The website this article came from is British, where the electricity runs on 50 Hz. I bet the author's brain runs 17% slower too. What a fake and gay gamer.
Since TVs use digital signals now, British console peasants can finally experience 60 fps. When the game has it, of course.
You think this soy would hack his precious Switch? He probably bought the OLED Zelda one (probably his 3rd Switch), and hacking patched units requires a mod chip soldered to the PCB. Nintendo also DMCA'd LockpickRCM, which is required for dumping the system keys required to dump an XCI (cartridge image). Not like the DMCA actually did anything because its open source, but this is expecting WAY too much from an individual such as this.
Had no idea there was more to it. Newest system I am familiar with the emulation of is the PS2. PS3 is supposedly pretty easy, too. That sounds like a lot of effort for something that's probably an above average game.
 
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