Frontends & Launchers: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "* Pegasus: Free. Fast. Immensely and overwhelmingly themeable (can be skinned to look and behave exactly like any other frontend, given the time and effort). Open-source and..."
 
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* Pegasus: Free. Fast. Immensely and overwhelmingly themeable (can be skinned to look and behave exactly like any other frontend, given the time and effort).  Open-source and actively in development. An absolute pain to configure, and lacks built-in scraping support, but Rickin and I hope to get something up and running for these pain points.


* Dig: Free. Slow. Themeable. Super easy to configure, and does have built-in scraping. Development has been abandoned and the app is closed-source. Consequently, this will never be able to launch certain emulators, like Flycast and the GBA build of Retroarch included on RP2.
* RetroX:  


* RESET: $5. Fast. Not themeable (my biggest personal con with this one). Slick, fast, and easier than both Pegasus and Dig to configure. Built-in scraping. Actively being developed.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;"
|-
! scope="col" style="text-align:left; color:white; background-color:#464646;"| Frontend/Launcher
! scope="col" style="text-align:left; color:white; background-color:#464646;"| Notes
|-
! scope="row" style="text-align:left;"| Pegasus
| Free. Fast. Immensely and overwhelmingly theme-able (can be skinned to look and behave exactly like any other frontend, given the time and effort).  Open-source and actively in development. An absolute pain to configure, and lacks built-in scraping support. Actively being developed.
|-
! scope="row" style="text-align:left;"| Dig
| Free. Slow. Theme-able. Super easy to configure, and does have built-in scraping. Development has been abandoned and the app is closed-source. Consequently, this will never be able to launch certain emulators like Flycast and the GBA build of Retroarch included on RP2.
|-
! scope="row" style="text-align:left;"| RESET
| $5. Fast. Not theme-able. Slick and easier than both Pegasus and Dig to configure. Built-in scraping. Actively being developed.
|-
! scope="row" style="text-align:left;"| RetroX
| $12/year. Fast. Theme-able. The easiest out of all of these to configure, by far. Uses built-in emulator cores, giving you handy universal shortcuts in all of your games. Some systems might be faster in RetroX than on the RP2s pre-installed emulators, while some might be slower. Emulation is less customizable than with other emulators. The subscription covers cloud saves, letting you stay synced across any device you use RetroX on, but with the notable downside that internet access is required to open your games. Actively being developed.
|-
|}


* RetroX: $12/year.  Fast. Themeable. The easiest out of all of these to configure, by far. Uses built-in emulator cores, giving you handy universal shortcuts in all of your games. Some systems might be faster in RetroX than on the RP2s pre-installed emulators, while some might be slower. Emulation is less customizable than with other emulators. The subscription covers cloud saves, letting you stay synced across any device you use RetroX on, but with the notable downside that internet access is required to open your games. Actively being developed.


Credit to @ryan86me
----
Credit to @ryan86me for the write ups for these

Revision as of 04:48, 15 September 2020

  • RetroX:
Frontend/Launcher Notes
Pegasus Free. Fast. Immensely and overwhelmingly theme-able (can be skinned to look and behave exactly like any other frontend, given the time and effort). Open-source and actively in development. An absolute pain to configure, and lacks built-in scraping support. Actively being developed.
Dig Free. Slow. Theme-able. Super easy to configure, and does have built-in scraping. Development has been abandoned and the app is closed-source. Consequently, this will never be able to launch certain emulators like Flycast and the GBA build of Retroarch included on RP2.
RESET $5. Fast. Not theme-able. Slick and easier than both Pegasus and Dig to configure. Built-in scraping. Actively being developed.
RetroX $12/year. Fast. Theme-able. The easiest out of all of these to configure, by far. Uses built-in emulator cores, giving you handy universal shortcuts in all of your games. Some systems might be faster in RetroX than on the RP2s pre-installed emulators, while some might be slower. Emulation is less customizable than with other emulators. The subscription covers cloud saves, letting you stay synced across any device you use RetroX on, but with the notable downside that internet access is required to open your games. Actively being developed.



Credit to @ryan86me for the write ups for these