I have Lime Wire and i have seen some Nintendo 64 emulators for the Mac! Before i do anything, i thaught i would ask.
29 Comments on N 64 Emulator for Mac OS X – Play Nintendo 64 Games on your Mac. Video is ready, Click Here to View ×. Learn how to download and install a Nintendo 64 Emulator to your Apple Computer (Macbook Air & Pro, iMac, Mac Pro, Mac Mini, etc.).
Also this is a really dumb question, is there any kind of PC emulator for Mac? I konw the anwser is more than likley NO! But i thaught ile ask. 8) SixtyForce is the only one I've ever tried, though I believe there are a couple of N64 emulators out there for the Mac. I've no idea how good they are. As for the PC, the main emulator everyone uses is. It's an extremely good emulator - but it's very, very expensive.
Plus, it can't emulate 3D hardware, so the only games you'll be able to play are 2D ones and older 3D games with software renderers. I've tried Half-Life on it and it was an extremely painful experience, but I used to play Star Wars Galactic Battlegrounds loads using it before the Mac version was released. Or you could buy a used N64 (Which costs what, $20?) and play the games as they were meant. I'd rather have better graphics, better sound, better performance in GoldenEye and PerfectDark (even the n64 stutters a bit in these), and the option of using WASD+mouse in the few FPS n64 games. Heck, I've even got an N64 controller hooked up to my PC, so there's no drawback. Would it give you better graphics? I was under the impression that it wouldnt.
![Pro Pro](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125457849/923024522.png)
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125457849/873080545.jpg)
It might be able to run at a higher resolution on your monitor. Or you could buy a used N64 (Which costs what, $20?) and play the games as they were meant. I'd rather have better graphics, better sound, better performance in GoldenEye and PerfectDark (even the n64 stutters a bit in these), and the option of using WASD+mouse in the few FPS n64 games. Heck, I've even got an N64 controller hooked up to my PC, so there's no drawback.
Would it give you better graphics? I was under the impression that it wouldnt. It might be able to run at a higher resolution on your monitor. Pretty much any decent n64 emulator will look leagues and bounds better than the original. Remember folks, the n64's resolution was 320x240 blown up to fill your tv's 40inch screen.
Triple that, add some texture filtering, and anti-aliasing, and you get this. Or you could buy a used N64 (Which costs what, $20?) and play the games as they were meant. I'd rather have better graphics, better sound, better performance in GoldenEye and PerfectDark (even the n64 stutters a bit in these), and the option of using WASD+mouse in the few FPS n64 games. Heck, I've even got an N64 controller hooked up to my PC, so there's no drawback.
Would it give you better graphics? I was under the impression that it wouldnt. It might be able to run at a higher resolution on your monitor. Pretty much any decent n64 emulator will look leagues and bounds better than the original. Remember folks, the n64's resolution was 320x240 blown up to fill your tv's 40inch screen. Triple that, add some texture filtering, and anti-aliasing, and you get this I've been playing GoldenEye and Perfect Dark using Project 64 on my brother's PC and the graphics on those games look MUCH better than they did on the N64.